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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1945)
.WO HERALD AND MEWS Saturday. March 31. 1945 Panny SINGLTON In - . "LEVETT ' TO BLONDIE". and Warhep BAXTER in "CRIME DH.'S COURAGE" 53 IK- ASWtLl In Kza "SHE'S PAKKS A SWEETHEART" : PIu "CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE" WU1U MrlNUti ' I STAGECOACH ,wara - cure revttj !S-5 m BETTY BUTTON jj BING CROSBY j Sonny ' j I Tufu I ,N.wa Jg I 'KLONDIKE 1 I FURY" - I I "BOSS " I ' of I RAWHIDE" i lit DRAWS YEAR PRISON Rim PAROLED (Continued From Page One) was questioned as to any state ment he wished to make, and O'Neill reiterated that his client's past record in the marine corps as well as in pri vate life was very Rood. He said he considered the jury's report as a "compromise ver dict" and appealed ior proba tion or parole. Judge Vandcnberg .advised the young marine - that the parole also meant that he was not to partake of any intoxi cating liquor. Stevens was re leased from custody after read ing and signing the judgment and parole order in the district attorney's office. Stevens is required to file a written re port with the district attorney each month. The young marine was ar rested on December 6. at the barracks when he entered a car owned by Karl Bold, 41-ycar-old Henley farmer who had been found unconscious that morning at the rear of Kern's Implement company on S. 6th. Bold died December 10 at Klam ath Valley hospital without re gaining consciousness. Stevens has been held in the Klamath county jail in lieu of bail since his arrest. He is a native of Painesville. Ohio. Elks Lodge to Staff USO Sunday The Elks lodge will provide man and womanpower for the USO on Sunday, according to Jack Linman. exalted ruler. Elks and their wives will staff the center throughout the day. L. Orth Sisemore, past exalted ruler, has been placed in charge of the installation of officers of the lodge, which will take place next Thursday. Duke O'Neal Critically III Duke O'Neal, former Klamath Falls automobile dealer and now employed by Ivory Pine com pany at Bly, is reported in a critical condition at Hillside hos pital. O'Neal is suffering from a heart condition. FUNERAL KATHRIN NEUBEET Funeral services for the late Kathrin Neubert who passed away at bex resi dence. 2143 Orehsrd. on Friday, March 30. 1M5, following an extended illness, will be held in the chapel of the Earl Whitlock Funeral home. Pina at 6th. on Tuesday. April 3, 1945. at 3 p. m. With the Rev. Victor A Schulxe. pastor of the Zion Evangelical Lutheran church of this city, officiating. Commitment services and interment family plot in Linkville cemetery. Friends are Invited. American Tank . , Units 170 Miles From Berlin (Continued From Page One) wrecked bridges and past road blocks. The first and ninth rapidly were closing a gap, now appar ently less than 50 miles wide, to bottle up from 30.000 to 40, 000 Germans still lighting in areas of the Ruhr, Germany's areas of the ruhr, Germany's last and greatest arsenal. . On the ninth army's flank the British second army, paced by three armored divisions, was sweeping deeper across the north German plain, and was SO miles beyond the Rhine. . . British Gain With such a depth beyond the Rhine, British armor might be in or near Mucnster, or midway between Mucnster and Hamm. The German radio said that British second army troops have crossed the Dortmund-Ems ca nal, a 170-mile waterway which connects Dortmund and the in dustrial Ruhr with tho river Ems, and had established a bridgehead on the east bank. Presumably such a crossing would be in the area where the British are driving from Dul men toward Muenster. The RAF mined the canal last August and on November 21 placed hits upon its banks which drained it for a distance of 16 miles. The U. S. ninth army's break through along the northern rim of the Ruhr valley progressed overnight, but frontline corre spondents were not permitted to say how dose it now had come to Paderborn. This break through, it was disclosed, is paced by the battle-tested sec ond armored division of veter ans of Africa, Sicily and Italy. This outfit, brought overseas by Lt.-Gen. George S. Patton, now is commanded by Brig. Gen. Isaac White. Through Paderborn American first army tanks last night swept through Pader born, 42 miles northwest of Kassel and 18S miles west of Berlin, but LL-Gen. Courtney Hodges slowed his racing ar mored columns today to consoli date his tremendous gains, AP Correspondent Don Whitehead reported. The tired, dust-grimed tankmen badly needed rest aft er six days of battle. Sheldon Joins Insurance Firm William A. Sheldon has be come a member of the firm of Chilcote and Smith, and will manage the firm's insurance de partment. Sheldon has had IS years' ex perience in the insurance busi ness as a broker. He comes here from Los Angeles. The Sheldons will live at 126 High street. They have two children, David, who is in high school, and Lou ise, 3. If Ifs a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one in the classified. RUSSIAN ARMY EARS VIENNA NEW DRIVE (Continued From Page One) ward the Bratislava (ate which already hnd carried to within 44 miles of the Austrian capital. Biskau also was v.rtured. Like Ratibor, this place was described as "a large communications cen ter and enemy strongpoint on tho left bank of the Oder." On tho" southern end of the eastern front, other soviet battle groups smashed to within 134 miles of the Italian frontier. Tho fall, of Danzig in the north freed perhaps SO Russian divi sions for the coming battle of Berlin. The -German communi que finally announced the loss of Kucstrin, fortress city on tho Oder's cart bank 38 miles from Berlin. It also said the first Ukrainian army had battled in to the encircled Oder fortress of Glogau, S3 miles northwest of Breslau. Germans Fight Ppritly Germans were fighting des perately to protect Vienna, Mos cow dispatches said. The Russian offensive toward Bratislava ran into acres of minefields and heavy artillery and mortar fire. The surge into Austria over ran some trenches and anti-tank barriers, but German fire was heavy and was supported by waves of infantry moved south eastward from Vienna barrack. Moscow announced last night that Marshal Feodor I. Tolbu khin's third Ukrainian amy had invaded Austria at a point north of captured Koszeg, 52 miles south of. Vienna, in a raoid thrust that is already imperilling the Austrian capital. Simultaneously, the Russian high command disclosed new successes along the frontier of virtually conquered Hungary and Yugoslavia where soviet forces drove within 134 miles of Italy for a possible lineup with British-American armies fight ing on that front. Gruelling Siege . The flag of the "Polish stale" was raised over Danzig after a gruelling siege that cost the Ger mans more than 49,000 killed or captured in the former free port. Raising of the Polish banner over the oort indicated recogni tion by the Russians of Polish claims to their European politi cal cauldron. The combined forces of two great soviet armies were driving westward through Hungary along the north and south banks of the Danube river In a direct assault on Vienna, which yester day reverberated to- attacks by heavy bombers of tho Italy-based U. S. 15th air force. The Ameri cans also bombed Graz, in Aus tria, 55 miles west 6f the ad vancing Russians. 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