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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1945)
' KILLED, ... asas a M E siUHi CRASHES IL,-.m n . May 28 (I') I Hum 7U.UU0 persons (IU, ...1 . !l . .1 cxiicrlmciilul army i,u u veteran 01 u .""7 "i..., r.ui.r Ci'iinunv V" V1..' ...i.,l i.nrl liiliirnri v iitUrndliig n wnr LillllOII shmv, had Just Cached- asCapl. WlllUiin L 2D. of NliiKurn rails L of h typo which Ims the tend inc uni" nliinc suddenly shot to L.roiiiid. struck Iho Bu ll,. ,Tr Wesley 13. Roehm sv " . I Lccsoiirii. v., " L ditch 200 yards tayed with tunning liuso nd hl wlfo, Susan; their kby clniiRiiici b, mini ia-c, Li. nld. and Donno Irene, tiths old, and Kathleen 23. 01 uuyiuti, wi'ic ing Pigeons Make Run To Tacoma OMA. May 28 (!) Pns- u... in mi nnvonn w nn ., ....twill v hnmintf nit. V HIIHJ W '! a nice yt'sin uny 11 oni Dm., lo their home Ei Tiicomn, mode a slow nliin in In nboiil 9 hours ton. the 22 in I Irs covered I rirtiilnr rnfi NinifCn mr L mm tht riixtrxit Mr A lie distnnco in lour Hours ll.HI lr of the Pacific Flylns Erne me run ounony wmi li.wi Mi-. I .Munni-l liu Mtiflr urn uii'i "J " fieu iiyuiK in uic rate 01 yards per minute. were released by the At 10 a. m. Sunday. MORIAL DAY EARL WHITLOCK 'always a day of dedica te thirtieth o May a which wc think rever II those no hove Bp their !or urn i v f which J 1 kmcrlcu.1! I I , - ; j this f V V ' ' ir Mo- : )W , V ! 1 Day, K CjJ-.'V rover- I J? A it still TT I !r, our I S I r these I ST I porj still more tender krstandlns, our sense of Bn more full and rich arc so many more of w our dead who gave lira ours inc "last lull oi cicvol on. after our nravcrs are (d and our tears are ly wc not find courage me inouglit that there now. as there have ken. who put this nation pneau or Justice and fair i inc nobility of the man far ahead of anv fcnsiderallon even the fion of their own In I lives. "VISIT THE S IN MEMORY GAR- 1 londav. Mr wmii.v t.'irl Whlllnr-lr IT,. Ill comment on "FOR f' wr iing." Tin Incrooia Still Short Of Demands , WASHINGTON. May 28 Two millions pomciiKvr ear tires and increiiso of 800,000 will bf availahln in June, but Hint amount still will full short of meeting demands. The Increase In next month's ration quota will "help n lot," said OI'A Rntlon Chief Mux McCullough. He added, how ever, that u backlog of ftOO.OOO to 800,000 applications for cas ings, low Inventories and a sea sonal Increaso In tiro failures will make the quota Inadequate. OPA cstlmiites that a 2,00(1, 000 allocation will have to be maintained several consecutive month befnro any new tires can be made available lo "A" car drivers. Pilot Wanted To Dump Goering Out MULLAN, Idaho, May 28 (IP) A U. S. pilot who flew Reich marshull Hermann Goering to a meeting with allied chiefs after his capture wrote his wife here that he was sorely tempted to Jettison Ills pompous cargo in midair. Capt. M. Y. Foster, pilot of the piano Jn which Gocrlinz tniv- elod, said his "rather effemin ate" passenger "gave me the creeps." "I don't know quite what lo uuiiK oi ii yci, no wrote. "You can imagine how it seemed tin there with that big, fat ape pointing out Munich and such places along tha route. "Several times 1 hod an Im pulse to turn the plane over and sco If I could shake him out but ho was wedged In like a chum pagno cork." Few Japanese Return To West Coast Area TOPAZ, Utah, May 28 Iff) Slightly less than one-third of the Japanese leaving the 10 U. S. relocation centers arc returning to Ihc west coast, Hay B. Halght, acting area supervisor of the war relocotion authority, said yesterday. Of 7252 Japanese Americans who have taken advantage of the lifting of the exclusion ban, but 23S3 have gone to the west coast. The cast has attracted 3208. Few. ho said, are remain ing near the relocation centers. Bumper Pear Crop Predicted In Med ford MEDFORD, May 28 UP) A bumper Rogue river valley pear crop was predicted by County Agent Robert C. Fowler as frost danger appeared ended. Smudge pots were used only six times this spring. Roy J. Rogers, federal frost observer, will leave June 1 for California. Hans Norland Fir Iniuranc. Prions 6060. IDE ,!c!,AMIi:?T?' May 28 vp Mill deadlocked on the pro posul sponsored by assembly democrats lo cut another half cent off Iho sales lax, the lcgls- luuiro weni into its l.Hh week today with most of the major Issues of the BOlh session yet to be settled. Blockaded by the lleup on toxes ore scores of special ap piiipriulion bills, the $00,000,- 000 nnstwur rnntrnr-lint A serve, Iho issue of public health insurance or l n e alternative hospitalization plan; several do-l-artmenlul reorganization meas ures and Kent-pa nf nlhor Imnnrl. ant bills. Conferees representing the two houses continued to seek a compromise on the sales tax issue Which wnillrl rpmnvn Ihn obstacle to passage of the fourth diii, or similar legislation, carry inc out Governor Wnrrnn'i iw. ommendiition for continuing the iui.i tax reductions another two years. McKenzio Pass Opening Delayed SALEM, May 28 (P) Mc Kcnzie Pass, on the trans-Cascade highway between Eugene and Bond, probably will not be reopened for some time, be cause of deep snow, State High way Engineer R. H. Baldock said today. Ualdock said the pass Is the only pass on the stale highway system that Is wind-swept, so that snow'is blown back on the ruad as soon as it is removed. (mml.tm the MEAT I 1 SAUCE I WITH THE I jm 'T-BONE Monday. May it. I9S HERALD AND NEWS SJ5VE1T M MODESS WITH THE PROVED DEODORANT w Goodricl )s aren t oned 11 been ;nJbcs, better let tu uuvo gel Wched, weak, New F"-n tube are good nccl 3.65 B. MILLER Ph. 4103 CV 3 ( A P0OA7 'S&UX0 W M VYMODS$ ) pXj? V 1 iffeertvif j EXTRAORDINARILY EFFECTIVE-according to 26 test, by Im partial laboratory. FRAISED IY THOUSANDS after year's tryout. You'll cheer, tool NO BOTHER with separate powder, no fuss. 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