Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 10, 1945, Image 2

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    TWO HERALD AND NEWS
SCHAUPP TELLS
PURPOSES OF
Purposes ol the inter-regional
Highway designation, pending
octore the state highway com
mission, were explained by High
way Commissioner Arthur
Schaupp in a brief talk before
the Klamath Kiwanis club
Thursday noon.
Schaupp re-siatcd facts he had
presented at the last highway
meeting in favor of the route
from fcugene through Klamath
Falls to Weed, Calif., for the in-ter-regional
designation. The al
ternative route proposed lies
down the Pacific highway
through Medford.
The commissioner, . in discuss
ing costs, poimed-out that there
is a difference of $100,000 a mils
between construction costs of the
proposed new 30-mile section of
the Klamath route, between
Chiloquin and Chcmult, and a
four-mile section of the Pacific
highway soon to be improved.
He explained that the inter
regional route suggestions by a
national committee some time
ago were only suggestions,- and
that the actual designation is yet
to be made. The idea behind
the interstate highway system is
to link metropolitan areas and
regions, he said.
Arguments in behalf of the
two proposed southern Oregon
routes will be presented to the
highway commission in Portland
' 'next week, Schaupp added.
Musical feature at the Kiwan
is luncheon was a presentation
of several numbers by the first
grade rhythm band of Roosevelt
school, with Frederick Roenicke
as soloist.
Henry Perkins was chairman
of the day.
REEDEB 10 LEAVE
County Judge U. E. Reeder
will leave Sunday for Portland
to meet with six other members
of the Oregon public lands com
mittee slated for a session Mon
day. . Judge Reeder said he would
go to Prineville Tuesday to
meet the Klamath-Lake delega
tion at which time courts of
these two counties will discuss
the recent decision of the com
missioner of the general land
office in Washington, D. C, in
connection with the proposed
Shevlin-Hixon land exchange.
It was learned today that an
appeal was mailed Thursday to
the Lakeview land office in re
gard to -the decision,
A district meeting of county
courts is set for Prineville
Wednesday. Reeder and mem
bers of the court expect to re
turn Thursday. - - -
Classified Aas Bring Results.
Men, Women! Old at
0,50,60! Wait Pep?
Want to Feal Years Younger?
T8 yrm Mane eiluuited, worn-out feellnr on ?
Ojuej bad done. Contain tonic many netd 40,
M. . for btrfy old oWt bwaiue low to iron: 1X0
prophylactic Coot Tiumlo hi, cal-m. 35c tatro-
Tabteu for sew pep. jounxer lethec ihu rtrj day.
At mr stores everywhere In Klimitb
PaJU, si Whitman Drag and Wslfreen'.
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
KO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Losi f Time
Prmaaot Bcalui
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Chfrepraetlo phrtleUB
SW Ktv Itk Esq aire TbMlrt) Bit
Fa B TOM
HI
PLAN
MATINEE DAILY OPEN 1:30 . 6:45 I
K5lWU JWVEA MUSICAL TIME Slr
Thursday. Mr ! 19s
Eden Says Poles
Led Underground
SAN FRANCISCO, May 10
() British Foreign Secretary
Anthony Eden said today the 16
Polish leaders arrested by Rus
sia included "nearly all the
leading figures of the Polish
underground movement."
Many of those arrested, he
said, were persons the British
thought should be included in
a new, democratic Warsaw gov
ernment. Speaking to a jam-packed
news conference, Eden also re
viewed the work of the United
Nations toward creating a world
security organization and pre
dicted that the problem of fit
ting in regional arrangements
would be worked out, although
"I don't yet see a solution."
Members of the Klamath
county budget committee pro
ceeded through a maze of fig
ures involving all departments
in the county, and announced
that they should be ready to
"run the tape" late this after-
noon.
Requests from the various
county offices were taken into
consideration by the committee
which met for the first time
Wednesday morning.
County Judge U. E. Reeder
announced today that when
final figures were tabulated a
check would be maae w see
that the amount did not exceed
the six per cent limitation and
if it has, "the committee would
have to use the scissors."
Members of the committee
include Alfred D. Collier, chair
man; E. M. Hammond, secre
tary, R. P. Ellingson Sr., mem
bers of the court. Judge U. E.
Reeder and Commissioners Fred
L. Pope and John rteoer.
GHAPU1IN TO LEAVE
FOR CARRIER DUTY
Oliver W. Jones, who
has served as chaplain at the
Klamath naval air station lor
th nast nine months, has re
ceived orders to report for duty
on an aircraft carrier upon the
reporting of his relief here. .
r-hnnlain Hebert W. Strour is
expected here soon from the
navy cnapiains scnooi. m r .
Jones and two-year-old daugh
ter Nancy, will leave when
Chaplain Jones receives orders,
for their home in Pittsburgh,
Pa; The family has resided on
the Lindley Heights road.
21 COAL MlERS
KILLED 111 BUST
(C6ntinued From Page One)
men and poisoning them with
deadly carbon monoxide gas.
Men who escaped attributed
their survival to the fact they
were working some distance
from the actual explosion scene.
Killed
Mine officials identified the
'dead as follows:
C. Delia Cord, Charles Matsu
ma. James Wycherly. M. H.
Braddock, James Jardine, James
Bailey, Pedro Gavaldon, Efram
Manzana, Manuel Trujillo, Toni
Virgil, Nick Sandoval, Joe Mon
taya, Clell Forsyth, Warren
Hotchkiss. Lawrence Figuera,
Joe Padillo, James Gilmore, Vir
gil Stamper, . Ira Hill, Arvll
stuBioiieid, ana jonn Martinez.
Irvine Leonard and Bud Wal
ton were missing and . feared
dead.
THREE METALS
SCHEDULED
JUL! RELEASE
(Continued From Page One) .
goods" using large quantities of
materials, such as automobiles,'
furniture, trucks, refrigerators
and stoves, "will have to be re
tained until supplies free up a
great deal more," Krug said in
a statement. "t
"These orders generally will
be amended to permit some pro
duction." he added.
The WPB chief said that of
420 control orders in effect
April 1, 73 already have been
revoked, "and it is expected
that about half will have been
revoked within the next few
months."
He emphasized that pent-up
demands for such programs as
farm machinery, transportation
and utilities will consume "a
great deal of the material freed
by cut-backs."
He stressed also that revoca
tion of particular orders will
not necessarily mean immediate
resumption of civilian produc
tion of the affected items. Revo
cation will, he said, clear the
way for such manufacture as
facilities, materials and man
power become available.
- (Continued From Page One)
statement last night replying
to Brig. Gen. Frank A. Allen
Jr., director ot the SHAEF pub-
lic relations division, who prev
iously had issued an BUO-word
statement detailing the reasons
why Kennedy's accreditation as
a war correspondent had been
suspended for filing the dis
patch. ' ,'
"General Allen and other re
sponsible officers of SHAEF
public relations made it clear to
me at Reims," Kennedy said,
"that no question of military
security was involved in re
lease of this news. Gen. Allen
told me, in fact, that Gen; Eisen
hower was desirous 1 of having
the news published as soon as
possible so that fighting might
halt and' lives possibly be saved.
Gen. Allen told me that Gen.
Eisenhower s hands were tied
by a decision coming from 'high
political levels .
Annual Music
Program Slated
By Schools ,
More than 1500 children will
take part in the annual grade
school music festival to be held
Friday afternoon. May 18, at 2
o'clock in Pelican court of Klam
ath Union high school, it was
announced today by Andrew
Loney Jr., director of music
education in we city scnoois.
There is no. admission and
parents and friends of the chil
dren are urged to attend. There
will be voice, - instrument and
chorus numbers on which the
students have worked during the
past year. All seven schools in
the system will De representee
Insurance policies to fit your
needs. Hans Norland, 118 North
7th (treat.
jy
JtfCU BMROM -A
1 s 1 1. w. $y&&nf GHEAT
1 00 'VM FIGHTS .
I I I ! I I h V BMdTock
Count Haul
IKEA RoJio-TerpAofa)
Finance Corps men of U. S. Third Army and a Reichsbanlt official (left
check bags of currency containing French. Norwegian. American, Bngiun,
Spanish and Portuguese money found In salt mine near Moecker. oer
niany, southwest of Oatha. The treasure trove contained 100 tons of tid
bullion, believed to be almost entire amount of Germany's Rold reserve,
plus priceless art treasures. Signal Corps radlo-telephoto.
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Page One)
Goebbels and his family, along
with other nazi bigwigs.
It will be better for all of us
to accept the idea that Hitler is
dead. He might as well be.
AMONG the -casualties of the
battle of Berlin is the SE
CURE FORTRESS idea, which
has possessed men's minds for
1000 years but now is dead for
good .and all. After Berlin,
which was the climax of the
Fortress Germany delusion, we
can accept this as proved fact:
No man can build a fortress
that a BETTER MAN can't take.
Jap papers please copy. The
little yellow men are building
their hopes on the now explod
ed secure-fortress dream. They
are hopelessly out of date.
IN the dispatches appears this
striking sentence: "The nazi
underground fortress and the
building above, it and. the
WHOLE OF THE HEART OF
BERLIN ARE IRREVOCABLY
DESTROYED TODAY."
The spectacle of Carthage
arises before our eyes. Carthage
was totally destroyed at the end
of the Punic wars. Not one stone
was left standing on another.
It never rose again. Its site is
still a desert.
Carthage was poorly (narrow
ly, shortsightedly, selfishly) led
as was nazi Germany. No
clear, wise leadership arose aft
erward. .
That is something for Ger
mans to put in their pipes and
smoke.
STARK drama stalks the news
today. The last battle of the
European war, tragic because it
was . so needless, horrible be
cause of the hate and the bile
that instigated it, strewed the
streets of Prague (AFTER the
cease-firing order had been giv
en) with bodies so numerous
they haven't yet been counted.
In these streets starving
Czechs got sudden word that a
Czech army was approaching.
Then its vanguard . appeared,
led by a truck in which three
Czech girls waved a Czech flag.
AP. 1 Hal, Boyle gives us this
in Nazi Gold
- -
moving picture of what fol
lowed:
I have heard many crowd
demonstrations, but none like
the npculiar sound that arose
from these oppressed people
celebrating their first full day
nf lihpratinn. It wasn't staccato,
like the veils of a cheerful
American crowd. This sound
had In it sadness and exhilcra'
lion and pride and HOPE, too.
It sang in the ears like a strong
wind pushing across a lumuuu
ous surf."
RED army units followed the
Czech units. Boyle continues:
"The incoming Russian troops
were wildly acclaimed by the
Czech BODUlace. . Every red
armv vehicle was soon over
flowing with Czech girls, whom
the GIs have voted the prettiest
in Europe.
THIS Czech attitude is another
straw In the wind by-which
we may Judge these Russians
that for us are the most in
trigulng and the most portent
ous mvstorv on earth today.
The Czechs are OUR kind of
people. Thev have known real
liberty TOLERANT liberty,
educated and cultured liberty.
In their little mountain-ringed
country thev have built OVER
THE CENTURIES a civilization
and a way of life as fair as any
that have ever existed.
Down through the genera
tions, they have FOUGHT, grim
ly and tenaciously, for their lib
erties fought against just
about everybody in central Eu
rope, against the Austrlans in
the days of Austria's greatness
and power, against the Ger
mans, against the Poles.
But very seldom against the
Russians.
ALWAYS the Czechs have Uvea
near to the Russians. They
know them, as well as any peo
ple in Eurooe. The Czechs, led
by their Behcs, were among the
first to throw in their lot with
Russia in this confusing war.
Perhaps this confidence on
the part of our kind of people
can help us to make up ouf
minds about these Russians
with whom we must live and
work in the world of the future.
Worker Injured At
Pelican Bay Mill
Edgar Paup, 327 Jefferson,
was admitted to Hillside hos
pital at 2:15 p. m. today suffer
ing from injuries received when
THURSDAY ONLY
u2a
Hear
SPECIAL
V Added
F
HEL
DL
irnHrH til friends and rela
tives gathered at 2 o'clock Wed
nesday at the Klamnth Temple
to ihiv their final tribute to four
victims of an explosion whlcn
t-mk six lives In me ucnniHri
mountain area in Lake county
last Saturday morning.
Services were held for Sher
man Shoemaker. 11. son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. L, snoemaKcr; dick
Joe. 14. and Joan, 13, children
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Patzke,
and Edward. 13. son oi nr. ann i
Mrs. Elnar Bngcn, an oi oiy. i
Floral tributes were piled I
nigll ai me Dnse oi i-hvu ui mu
four small caskets. More than
450 persons ultcndcd the rites,
one of the largest funerals ever
held here and first mass rnuai
in many years.
Rev. Daniel B. Anderson, pas- ,
tor of the Klamath Temple, as. !
sisted by Rev. T. L. Brooks and !
Rev. Pollack, formerly of Bl.v.
conducted the rites and each of
the four children were eulogized
bv the ministers. A group of t
songs preceded the service.
Students ot Bl.v grndo and I
high school, where the four
youngsters were enrolled, were i
among those In the church. Pall i
bearers for all were made up oi
members of the Boy Scout troop ,
at Bly, Intimate friends and ,
members of the three families. ,
Each of the boys was a member
of the Bly troop. ,
An honor guard was made un,
of Boy Scouts and the Scout ;
area was represented by Cpl.
Larry Albrltton, field director, I
Marine Barracks;
Burial for tho Patzke children
and Edward Engen took place
in Linkvlllo cemetery. Remains;
of young Shoemaker were ship--ped
to Live Oak, Calif., for In-j
terment In the family plot.
Rites for Mrs. Elsie Mitchell,
wife of Rev. Archie Mitchell;
who accompanied the children
on the fateful outing, will be
held at Port Angeles, Wash., for
mer home of tho couple who
had but recently come to Bly
to engage In the ministry. Jay
Glfford, son of Mr. and Mrs. N.
Li. UUJOrtl, HI1U I!1C-1IMI-
of the party to be killed, will be
burled In Medford under the
direction of the' Owslpy Funeral
home of Lakeview.
Arrangements were made here
by Ward's Klamath FuncraJ
home, assisted by Owsley's.
he became caught In a belt at
the Pelican Bay Lumber com
pany mill at Pelican City.
Paup's condition I. not con
sidered critical. He was moved
from the mill by tho Klamath
Ambulance service.
jtoamiMHKasettrHW
MASS
ML
FOR FOUR
AST VICTIMS
The Screen's Most
Explosive Expose
r
The STRANGE DEATH
of ADOLF
With Ludwlg DONATH - G.org.
DOLENZ . Gale
Frlti KORTHER
MAY 10th
Him Play
Attraction K-U-H-S
America's A
S f iJ ( Most Popular J
' Violinist
Jack Wissenback'
Dies In Klamath
Jack C. Wissenback of Shady
Pine died Tuesday, May 8. at
10 a. m. lie had been 111 for
five days.
Wissenback, who was night
watchman at the Algoma Linn-,
ber company from 11)21) lo lDH.'l,
was a native of Illinois and
would havo been 74 In July,
1045.
11c is survived by two sons,
D P. Wissenback and James J.
Wlssenbaok, of Klamath Kails,
and two daughters, Mrs, 11. W.
n ? 1 ui MwiiMMMiwi mmmw
TONIGHT
Aim
ROBERT MUTTONTJCAMSUtaVAM-AtAN HALE
THE GREATEST
MYSTERY?
IN ALL HISTORY?
HITLER!
SONDERGAARD
Ganaral
His $100,000 Strad
"A CAPPELLA CHOIR" S
Directed by Andrew LONEY
Clllltt of Klamnu ,
Mr.. Ou. DrapSS W
ton, and 13 grXhi
11 mu ennpei 0f W.rrtS'lUK
Lome Friday . m"'"1 JunJ
m. Friend, arc- liJ..',"'
tory. " '" Unv
t-AHt-NSIVE MtDlCnT,
Popo Clement VI " , '
most co.Hlly ,,!,! d 1),
world when ,e w 1 ln
hl last illncit'irAiJ'W?
ed gem. were gVl. il'
J230.000 worlh"..,
14 day., " U,M upjj
Dok oMIc. 0p.nl
W..k Day. aBhow., ,,
ft i'kaU
Addid
POPJYI CARTOON
"MOVING AWIIGH'
NOW
Playing
Har.'i Th
SHOCK-
CRAMMED
drama of Iht ujlf
orgies b h I n d till
hush-huih atorlti
that all Swlntlina
couldn't itopl
ririBTc uriw nw SALE
Lo9 : '
(fox Included)
At the PELICAN THEATW
rt!V
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pratonti jp