Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 12, 1945, Image 2

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    f WO HERALD AND NEWS
Saturday. May 12. lS4o
DEMANDS HANGING
wncrnw Mnv 12 JPiCanv
mentator Nikolai Folyanov de
clared in the newspaper muw
mol Pravcla today tnai jumikb
.1 a' ty linntfinc of Franz
Daivn nar.i riiulomat cap-
nrA4 hv American forces. He
named Von Papen specifically
in an article saying "the time
has arrived to Ret busy with
those criminals who started the
war in Europe.
ill TONIGHT II
IMf
CWIBt
H1HH1W1
Robert LOWERY
mm
And
"THE
NATIONAL .
BARN DANCE"
ll BLACK ARROW
Seotty I
SING I
NEIGHBOR B
SING I
and fl
WILD HORSE 1
RUSTLERS I
(Continued From Page One)
formation seeking to refute
Schaupp's assertions. Mean-u-hilo.
the Klamath chamber of
commerce roads committee has
been busy for many wccks, ana
has prepared a brief in support
of the Willamette rouie acsignu.
tion. '
SuDoorti Rout
Robert W. Sawyer, editor of
the Bend Bulletin and a former
highway commissioner, supports
the Willamette rouie, ana ticna
generally is behind this project.
So also is LiaKeview, iiueiaKc,
Alturas. Reno, and numerous
other points off the route, as
well as those upon n.
Going from here to the meet
ing will be Tom Watters, chair
man of the highway committee;
Charles Stark, manager of the
chamber of commerce; A. u. col
lier, member of the city plan
ning commission and the high'
wnv rnmmittee: Malcolm Epley,
managing editor of The Herald
and News, and others. B. K. Sny
der of Lakoview, chairman of
the house roads committee in
the legislature; Sawyer, of Bend,
and William Niskanen of the
city, and others will be on hand
in benau 01 me vmianicm:
route.
Eugene Neutral
Eugene, on the junction of the
two routes, is reported neutral.
There have been confused re
ports about Portland s attitude,
A R. Tromblev. Portland chain.
ber roads chairman, was quoted
in the Medford Mail-Tribune as
saying his group favored the Pa
cific route.
Frank McCaslm, president of
the Portland chamber, in answer
to an inquiry from ine rieraia
and Jiews, wired as tonows:
"True Trombley sat in at
Medford meeting. Portland
chamber wants both roads built
to high standards. Present dis
position is to remain neutral re
garding designation ana leave
that question to the local com
munities." .
Lines of German
Prisoners Head
Toward Red Lines
; MOSCOW, May 12 VP) Long
lines of German prisoners moved
toward the soviet union from
every sector of the front today,
headed for reception centers
where they will be classified ac
cording to occupations.
The total of prisoners taken
between Wednesday and Friday
has risen to the neighborhood of
600,000.
Coast Highway Pattern
Congressmen Urge
Opening Of Mines
WASHINGTON, May 12 (IP)
Thirty-one western congressmen
yesterday urged War Production
Board Chairman J. -A. Krug to
allow the nation's gold mines to
reopen.
Their joint letter, declaring
that no other industry has been
inflicted with such hardships,
was made public by Rep, Engle
(D-Calif.).
They included Bartlett (El
Alaska), Stockman and Ells
worth (R-Ore.).
Magazine Writer
Gets Barracks Data
: Arthur Q. Maisel, special
writer for Cosmopolitan and
Reader's Digest, is here for one
week obtaining data which he
will use in a story on the Ma
rine Barracks for the two na
tionally known magazines.
Maisel, guest at BOQ at the
Barracks during his stay in
Klamath Falls, is especially in
terested in the unique methods
employed at the Barracks in
the treatment of tropical dis
eases including exercise and
the establishment of physical
fitness programs. Maisel is the
author of "Third Rate Medicine
For First Class Fighting Men,"
which appeared in the April is
use of Cosmopolitan.
)$ VRTLAND
l) ........... , . .
I WEED if v
I ))) ' ' : ' " REK0
I ul I , v - f J L CARSON CITY .
w v
SAN FRISCO
This map shows a network of major highways on the Pacific eoaet ot particular interest a
this time in view of the forthcoming aetignauon oi pen o im ini.i-..s.i... vm
louthern Oregon. The Willamette (double line) end Pacific route involved in the current quti-
. . ..... t t i . 1 1 t - J y 1 11,111 . tM-Mtan -nnnarllnn,
tion betore tne mgnway commiMion xe iaemma. mi r, ...o.n. .vw . .............. ..........
. . i i . t. .,,.11 iL, -nula nnh
with tae inter-ltate route inio i.os j-.ngeie uy wy oi mm i -
through Bend. The highway commission will hear arguments Tuesday on the Willamotte and
racitic routes, ana must aeciae oy juiy i.
Woman Seeks
Damages For
Injuries In Fall
Audrey Sandefur today
brought suit in circuit court
against Curt Lion, Klamath Falls
merchant, seeking $6000 for in
juries which she said she re
ceived in a fall while in Lion's
employ January 17, 184S.
The comnlaint set forth that
the plaintiff was going to the
rest room when she walked into
an open stairway which usually
was covered by a trap door. She
fell and suffered injuries to the
arms, shoulders and back. W.
Lamar Townsend of Klamath
Falls. William P. Lord and Ben
Anderson of Portland, are attor
neys for the plaintiff.
DIETICIAN SELECTED
MOSCOW. May 12 (IP) Wini
fred Mackin, Vanport, Ore., has
been selected for specialized
dietician . training at Michael
Reese hospital in Chicago. She
was one of nine home economics
seniors at the University of
Idaho to be chosen by the Amer
ican Dietetics association.
Japs to Pray
On New Crisis
SAN FRANCISCO, May 12 HP)
Radio Tokyo, after a day of un
confirmed claims of damage to
American ships in Okinawa j
waters, and of savage, spear
wielding Indonesian "volunteer"
aid on Tarakan Island off
Borneo, gave notice of a national
prayer meeting for "tiding over
the crisis."
Continuing its home-consumption
battle claims, radio Tokyo
said in a broadcast intercepted
Dy ine teaerai communications
commission, that Japanese sea
units yesterday sank two ships
of unidentified category and
damaged an American carrier.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
. Matins ni1v . DkM. A e.CT a4
ret Mfouunon buu i 4M oi j
Continuous Show Sat- Sun. Open Hlitl 12:30 Continuous Show Sat. - Sun.
A?- (U i
jtfji And you'U be mad .bout them
Delacy Says Press
Prints Scare Stories
SEATTLE, May 12 (IP) Rep.
Hugh Delacy (D-Wash.) declared
last night that U. S. newspapers
are "trying deliberately to
thrnu lln n srnrp fhvl trvinff tO
show that one nation or another
is out of step at the (United
Nations) conference."
Speaking at a meeting spon
sored by the King county demo'
cratic central committee, De
nrtrfoH that "Russia is the
chief target ... But I don't
think the conference will break
up."
Before the meeting, the con
gressman said he had been ad
vised by the war shipping ad
ministration that Pacific coast
ports soon would be "jammed
with all tvpes of shipping" be
cause of the expected acceler
ation of the Pacific war.
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Past One)
bombs and shells. The R""'"""
ire now recovering the drowned
bodies. . ,
THE 400,000-odd Germans In
Norway appear to he quietly
surrendering and . "lI!:
return to ciermany. cjuisliiik
police chief "dhli police nilii
later are said to have killed
themselves rather than Ince the
Norweginn patriots.
It isn't too hard to under,
stand. Suppose the Japs hart
taken the Pacific Cons and
some of our scum hud JO'NbD
them, shooting and torturing
the rest of us. What we d have
done to thrm When wc got I e
upper hand again wouldn I be
pretty to sce t
THERE is a new Russian
scare. . , ,
Reports published In London
today say that Stalin lias writ
ten Churchill that the Yalta
pledges hnve bean UHOKfcN
and that further co-operation is
impossible. Drltlsh and Ameri
can officials refuse comment.
The rumor is out that Church
Ill and Truman are planning
meeting.
YOU'D belter just keep your
fingers crossed and hope for
the best. Stalin Is admittedly
hard to peg. But ho must know
that unless Russia, Britain and
the United States get along to
gether SOMEHOW the world
of the future will be ALL
DARK, with no rosier, softer
lights.
It's hard to believe that the
Russians don't want peace after i
all they've suffered.
ALL Europe today Is a powder :
keg of unreasoning, bitter
hatreds, with matches scattered j
all around. !
Example: 1
General Stack, of our 30th
division, is said to huvc
SHAKEN HANDS with GocrlnR j
after he was captured. (Wc
Americans are an odd breed of
sportsmen, and it MIGHT have ;
'happened.) But the report
ANGERS the British. The Lon- ;
don News Chronicle says In a
hot editorial: i
"Once and for all, Goering
is an evil, cruel murderer to I
whom justice must be done. Be- I
cause he is fat, ho is not a king.
Because he laughs, he is not j
merciful. By his record, he Is a
criminal."
SERVES, you see, ire rasped
L so raw after all these years i
of horror that even the British,
who have traditionally prided
themselves upon what we (pos
sibly foolish) Anglo-Saxons call
"sportsmanship," flare up hotly ,
at us over the mere report of a
handshaking with a captured .
enemy.
(Stack was wrong, of course, :
if he did It, There are hands
that are too bloody to be shaken.
But men do strange things under
the stress of battle.)
TF you can, you'd belter kneel
by your bed each night and
offer up this prayer:
"Dear God, give to us who
are the victors MEN AS LEAD
ERS who have the vision, tho
balance, the courage and the
stamina to lead us WISELY
through these dangerous hours
of bitterness and haired and
temptation."
BIRTH OFFICE CLOSED
The register office at Rich
mond, Eng., was clojed just a
few years ago. The birth of the
former Prince of Wales at White
Lodge, Richmond Park, was reg
I istered at this office.
Break With Reds
Reported Rumor
WASHINGTON, May 12 M'l
Aotlng Serrclnry of Stale Joseph
Grew snld today he hart no
knowledge of any communica
tion from Marshal Slnlln to the
effect that cooperation wllh lltn
western allies had become im
possible. llo voiced Ihe disclaimer In
response to questions iihnul pull.
Ilshrd reports thai Stnllii hud
written Premier Churchill, with
a cupv to President Tiunmii,
Hint tiic Yallu agreement hud
been broken and Unit he believed
it fntlUi lo discuss the Polish
mnhleiii further.
It wns learned meanwhile
Hint the soviet government lias i
not replied lo the request of Sec
retary of Slide Slettlnlus and
Foreign Sivrutiiry Kdcn In Sun
Francisco that lluxslii furnish In
formation regarding the nrrrsl
In Moscow of HI former Polish
underground leaders.
Rprd Pino Driv.
underway d I
rnlKST niVlrn .. "B
W'l-neserll,,,,';"'"?,,,
urgpsi in t, -
a drive of ,m .'
i i. "i irw . 'i I
l""o logs gnl imdNwi ."'H
day In he Prlp,t 'J ,
The lou mm , y
l. .1...7... ",," "
" i-rn
miles
niamond m.;:;vs
..!!!"! Cm
IU... . mi.
six WeeV ' Mil
WARNINGS DISPLAYED
SAN r'HANCISCO, May 12
('Vl .Soiilln-n.it storm warnings
were dtspluycd at 2 a. in., to
day along the Pacific coasl from
Tatoosh Island, Wash., lo Capo
Mendocino, Calif., for southerly
winds of strong lo gale force,
the weather bureau hue report
ed. Small rrnfl warnings were
pnslrd nt 2 a. in., from Cape
Mendocino to Point Reyes.
Ring and tlm)cl. ,UZ'?' W
l-iit to
Cedric Foster
Comment.1,,
Sunday Night
o:ju p. m. - Kfj
"The Man With th, H,l
Sheldon & Let
imurence Coumilo,,
ill . 8th St. hMin)l
Allllletod Wllh
CnlLCOTE t SMITH
.'..i ii i7'-iirri-f m ' mj mi u... 'I J I
DOUBLE .
FEATURE
QTflRTQ QIINnnV muiu
winiuv uunvni
Open 12i30. 8l. Sun. Contlnuoui
FUTU
THE EXCITING . . . THROBBING . . . THRILLING
STORY Of AN EXUTING, THRILLING IANDI
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KENT TAYLOR
I LJ.JJT'1
r
f e
wHh
KENT TAYLOR
MARGARET LINDSAY
JOHN CARRADINE
DEAN JAGGER
.ACTION HITI
Idaho Kid"
0
KEEN AN
WYNN
CARL r I f ft A I I
inB unrnK riviUKC A I BUIrf I MtA I Kba l
CONTINUOUS SHOWS DAILY
OPEN 12:30 PHONE 3262
"THE WISEST MEH C
LED BY A DANCING
ft
trVwirj
My,
2 BIG HITS
Starts
SUNDAY
W BE I i
6IHLJ I;
Also, Good 1 1 H'. , IA
"OUTLAW If I klEWT l 2 I
DEPUTY" II jS)&J&5u
s back in action! When he Isn t '
Beery':
killing Japs, he's making up
tall stories... that no
one believes!
STARTS
STARTS A II M IMI
fJ III III: r
v a J w, MM n I
yr w w ----- r
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IM II OTT-3 4 it v.
I Lrl W H I III I
I Ii contlnu... """"" U till u "mmmi JJM
World Crlinlni'l
HTLER DEAP?
BPECTACUMH
rums of ortit ah
and sea Bamt u
V. S. Fleet DtfuU
Jap j
drlv
ft
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