Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 06, 1945, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    FOUR HERALD AND NEWS
Wednesday. June B. 1S43
flAMX rtJJKDH MALCOLM KFlXt
editor HUU Sailor ,
JlSpIiuid. ud Pin. .tree KUmall. rails Oioo. M tt.
JdPubUarona Co n4 lb. Km PuoUsnlm Compear.
the defendant had been Indicted and for which
he was on trial. We do not doubt that Judge
Vandenberg reluctantly reached the decision
that withheld the case from the Jury.
Another trial is to be held in connection
with the same set of circumstances on another
charge. It is set for June 18.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
i 75c B? null
17 50 By null
sua
jar SS.0
ojtrtdlMOm.lh. lkm. Modoc saw counts -J" '
CfiMrad a Mood u mattw at th. poetofne.
faUeTora- on Auiuat JO. 1S undw ul of eoosroM.
Mutft 3. UTS
etsmber.
ajeoetatael Press
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
Today's Roundup
Br MALCOLM EPLEY
ITCHYPANTITIS, usually in evidence at ath
letic contests when the home town team Is
losing, afflicted some of the customers at last
night s "Heres your lruanuy
show.
While the army's young an
nouncer was still speaking, the
people of the itchypants got
up and started to walk out
a rank discourtesy.
The program was not over,
and the army announcer still
had important things to say.
One wonders what the rush
for the gates ' was all about,
yad nil thecp nranle been sit
ting there throughout the show EPLET
with vastly important matters waiting for them
outside? At 10 o'clock at night, did they have
so much vital business to do that they couldn't
wait for five minutes?
Fortunately, the Star Spangled Banner caught
most of them. They had evidently heard that
it is customary to stand at attention when the
national anthem is played. So they were stop
ped by the music, but at the last note were
released to race breathlessly through the gates
to the mighty tasks that awaited them.
The pause, we hope, caused no disasters in
private or public business.
History
A STICKLER on historical facts is our good
friend, Bob Sawyer, publisher of the Bend
Bulletin. This week, he took to task Will
Lindley, Eugene newspaperman, for historical
errors in an Oregon Journal story dealing with
the inter-regional highway controversy. As
many Klamath people read the story, they will
be interested in Mr. Sawyer's comments:
The controversy over the route to be selected
as the inter-regional highway route in Oregon
south of Eugene has gone over into the histor
ical misinformation stage. That Is unfortunute.
With the exact record available it is to be re
gretted that confusion over the facts should be
permitted to enter.
The misinformation to which we refer is pre
sented In a feature article in last Sunday's issue
of the Oregon Journal's Pacific Parade maga
zine. In It Will Lindley. of Eugene, tries to tie
the Pacific railroad survey of nearly 90 years
ago up with travel route In Oregon. He makes
the effort by implying that the Williamson and
Abbot portions of that survey were independ
ent of each other. He implies that the two un
dertakings were actual route surveys and he
has Williamson doing part of Abbot's work. '
Of course, as readers of this column well
know, the survey was all one undertaking with
Williamson the chief and Abbot second in com
mand. Contrary to the Lindley assertion Wil
liamson did not go to the Columbia nor did he
see the lower Deschutes. Indeed, all that he
saw of the Deschutes river was an occasional
piece of the Little Deschutes between Crescent
and Rosland. Abbot saw the main river north
of Spring river and at Benham falls. Sisters
was Williamson's farthest north. Each, with
his party, followed Indian trails for almost the
entire route examined except that Abbot, pro
ceeding south from Portland, followed the old
territorial road.
In his effort to build up a story Mr. Lindley
goes sadly astray of those Williamson-Abbot
surveys. And, incidentally, he even gets the
year wrong writing it as 1853 when in fact the
work was done in the summer of 1855.
Directed Verdicts
DIRECTED verdicts are given sparingly by
the courts. They are based on a point of
law, and the judge, when he directs a verdict,
must be convinced that he cannot legally per
mit the issue to go to the jury.
A directed verdict yesterday ended a trial .
In circuit court here. It was a shocking case,
and there was indication that an offense of some
nature- had been committed. The legal point
was that the judge held there was no evidence
to substantiate the particular charge on which
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON
W" ASHINGTON, June 6 Mr. Hannegan Is
taking nothing for granted. The political
pal of the president actually sent skiuto srauu
out into various sections of the country to
ascertain how the new moves from the White
House are regarded. He did not trust polls,
even his own, but wished detailed reports.
From all sections the answer was about the
same. In effect, they amounted to an enthus
iastic go-ahead sign on the line Mr. Truman is
hewing with his cabinet changes, legislative
suggestions and foreign policy.
Mr. Hannegan was told by his selected agents
the nation had warmed up to methods of the
executive, although the leftwing crowd, em
bodying the stereotyped New Dealers, was a
little restless and inclined to indulge in a few
carom shots. As a matter of observable fact
the CIO, for a prime example, did not endorse
the Schwellenbach appointment to labor, pos
sibly because the new cabinet man is a north
west political associate of AFL Boss Dave Beck.
They did not like Mr. Biddle's invited exit as
attorney general either. But Mr. Truman even
ed it up by presenting the unemployment pay
maximum of $25 a week which CIO devised
and lost at the last session of congress, further
by asking the dictatorial government reorgani
zation powers Mr. Roosevelt wanted and failed
to get, by having his Mr. Vinson go out for the
New Deal peace-planning program, by pushing
.....iiim in thp house for the Bretton Woods
agreement, which the CIO and Mrs. Roosevelt
have been promoting as if to put bankers in
their place and some other steps.
Indeed, there has been nothing for the radi
cals to complain about. Nothing upon which
they could lay their restless fingers in accusa
tion, although a target may be provided shortly
when the wage increases fail to measure up to
their demands. In bulk, however, Mr. Truman's
program is the one they devised. Indeed,
while Frankfurter and Mrs. Roosevelt have lost
their appointive influence, Mr. Truman has in
sisted upon keeping their best friends, Treasury
Secretary Morgenthau and Judge Rosenman,
domestically, while also holding on to Harry
Hopkins and Mr. Stettintus internationally.
.
Different Spirit
MR. TRUMAN has simply been doing the
same things in a different spirit, follow
ing the same line but in a different way and
evening things up a little. You can see it in
the reorganization proposal. While Mr. T de
manded the power Mr. R wanted, he did not
want to write the bill himself but would
leave it to congress. He has sent up no pre
pared bills on any important subject, but is
respecting the position of congress.
The carom shots have so far developed from
the Russian problem. The country shows signs
of breaking into two schools of thought on
this. Most people seem to feel Moscow has
treated us obscurely, if not badly, on practical
ly every late issue of the war and peace, except
Argentina, the one point we have won and
they do not like that either. Yet on the other
hand I have seen a radical nwspaper blindly
denouncing the army censorship in our occupa
tion zone as if we had blacked out the whole
of Germany, not mentioning the much more
extreme censorship of Russia over every type
of news of any other kind from Russian
occupied zones not only in Germany but
throughout Europe. The radical journals in
New York have generally become so onesided
that they defend every Russian interest and
attack every American step, bitterly assailing
the state department at every opportunity. This
shows a rather thoughtless and purely political
enthusiasm. Yet even on this problem, the
president is being backed by a strong majority
in the country as a whole.
.
Achieves Unity
MR. TRUMAN has thus managed t- ..hleve
popular unity, which the methods of the
Roosevelt regime prevented. A heavy majority
of people have been found willing to forget
past differences and to close the ranks of this
nation before the world in order to maintain
its prestige and smash the Japanese.
The anti-New Deal democrats well know Mr.
Truman is supporting Roosevelt policies and
personages but are not criticizing him here or
elsewhere, in their relief over the way he has
been trying to even things up.
It is a remarkable job when you stop to
think about the difficulties with which he was
faced.
SIDE GLANCES
cowl im rrMM wYict. a rmnttwrw.
"'Here she comes nijaiii. and I know what she's boiiih lo
say nrcortling to the recent survey we ought to hiivr
plenty of pork chons and we must lw hiilinir Vnii"
Objective Won In Realistic
BaWe On Modoc Field Here
It was lush grass on Modoc
field instead of the sharp, vol
canic rocks of a Pacific isle, but
army infantrymen made it real
istic enough as they crawled 100
yards to the Jap pillbox.
Garand rifles, automatics, light
and heavy machine guns, ba
zooka, mortars, flame-throwers
moved forward, over the same
yardage many a football team
has fought for in peace-time
contests.
A machine gun chattered from
the camouflaged pillbox, spout
ing jets of flame. Planted
charges to simulate mortar fire
detonated, the concussion whip
ping the faces of the 3000 ob
servers in the stands.
The crawling infantrymen
crouched for the final rush.
The lights went down. The
men ran forward with flame
throwers. There were spouts of
red flame and the heat was felt
in the stands 50 yards away.
The pillbox flared, and the army
ground forces' "Here's Your In
fantry" show was over. . .
The pillbox assault was the
climactic feature of the big
show, held last night as a 7th
War Loan feature. Represented
in the audience, were bond sales
PILES -
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
N. LeH of Tim.
Permanent Basalts!
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Chlr.pr.Btl. Fbrstelai
Ho, 7lfe Esquire Tb.alr. Bl(
P.... TOM
totaling $154,000, and sales of
war bonds today in Klamath
county were also credited to the
infantry demonstration.
First part of the program was
ffiven nwr tn an avhihlflAn
infantry equipment. The cost of
cvciy article was given 10 me
audience by the announcer, re-
neatprllv pmnhaalTmi, Via Ann.
' J HI. k - -
mous cost of war. A group of
uuanirymen were introduced
with home town and occupation
given to show the diverse com
position of the army's fighting
units.
Thp R3rr1 nrmu amtnl
0.vu.iu 'I" 1-1.
band furnished music for the af-
iair, ana a tnrnung musical
c rvoo uic vuuii lUHUillUIl
of "Roger Young," the infantry
song, by Lloyd Rauw of Klam
ath Falls.
LARGEST GORILLA
A1thniifh atocinft,a t- tA
most publicized gorilla in fhe
World, ho t. Tint thA lorffnet (n
captivity. Ngagi, a giant gorilla
01 me oan uiego zoo, weighs 635
pounds, or 100 pounds more
than Gargantua.
NOW AVAILABLE
(To All Users)
Adding Machine!
Calculators
New Royal Typewriter!
DESKS CHAIRS FILES
Service .a All Machines
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO.
122-124 S. 9th. Klamath Falls
Courthouse Records
Complaint. Filed
Jolc. M.e Parsons v.. Sanford B. J.
Paraona. Suit for annulment of mar
riage. Charge, plaintiff under 18 yean
of age and married without content of
parent, or guardian. Plaintiff asks that
. .. .. wwivc mn ircusier DC
S'il? ! ouple mld September
Virginia M. Hembree vs. Herbert T.
Hembree. Suit for divorce. Charge,
cruei .nd. Inhuman treatment. Couple
married November 10, 1842. at Van
couver. Waih.
Fannie E. Hawe. VI. Qulncy E. Hawea.
Suitfor annulment of marriage. Charge,
!".?!.? 'lle" and void on ground,
that defendant failed to wait alx month,
after divorce specified under Oregon
law before .gain entering the state of
matrimony. Plaintiff aika that maiden
name of Fannie Evelyn Hall be restored.
Couple married February 5, 1B45. at
Reno, Nev.
Jostlee Caere
Helen Eileen clleden, operating trailer
without one red light. Fine, W.50.
Conrad WoolfreoV Johnson, permitting
our people to rid. In front seat of an
automobile. Fine, SS.50.
FUNERAL
, ANNA L. UDELL
, ,5u,ner.1 .ervlc" to th l"1" A""'
Lldell of Tulelake, Calif., who passed
fw?j;Jn.Y.r1'"' c'"- 0" Friday, June
'.,'0' following an lllneu of 12 days
Sf'll ,be held in th. chapel of the Earl
Whlllock Funeral Home, Pino at Slxlh,
Friday, June 8, 1943 at 2 p. m. with the
Rev. Victor Phillips, pastor of the First
Methodist church of thi. city officiating.
Commitment services and Interment
J;m!iv. 5!ot ln ,n" loor cemetery at
Merrill, Oregon. Friends .r. Invited.
ATTENTION
FARMERS
W e p a y highest
eaih prices for LIVE
or DRESSED POUL
TRY. Phone 5175,
or tee your nearest
Safeway market
operator.
SAFEWAY
Market
Quotations
Haqer
NEW YORK. Junt 6 IAP) Select! v
buy ln bolsurvd numerous ipecialUu,
Ucm7ti and rails in today's markot
but quite a caw ravoriies were unauia
to make any kind of headway.
Closing quotation!;
American Can 90
Am Car & Tdy . -
Am Ttel fc Tel . IW'i
Anaconda -,, 34)
Caitt Packing 33
Cat Tractor - 90 U
Commonwealth it Sou IS
ftirtt.UVrivht , . tx
General Electric ,
General Motors
Gt Nor Ry pfd H
Illinois Central
Int Harvester
Kennecott
Lockheed ,
Long-Bell "A" -
Montgomery Ward
N Y Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas & El
Packard Motor .
Penna R R
Republic Steel
Rlchileld Oil
Safeway Stores -
Scars Roebuck -
Southern Pacific
Standard Brands
Sunshine Mining .
Trans-America
Union Oil Calif ...
Union Pacific
U S Steel
Warner Pictures
- 6&H
34
- 871
38
- 34.
.- 19S
KIN
28
- 30,
39i
ei
39S
r-
- 12
- 33
48
- 3SH
lata
Potatoes
CHICAGO. June 8 lAP-WTAi PoU
toes: arrivals 63 on track 90, shipment
713: offerings very light; demand ex
ceeds available- supplies: market firm
at ceilings; California Long White, U. S.
Nr. I 4 47-4 60: Louisiana Bliss
Triumphs and Long White. U. S. No. 1,
4.10; North Carolina Cobblers, U. S.
No. 1. -t.l8440: Arizona Red Warbas.
U. B. HO. 1, S4-M.
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND. Ore.. June S (AP-WTA1
R.t.fal rattle aoo. total B50: calvea 35;
market active, fully steady: quality most
ly meaium ana oeiow: lew commun
medium steers tl2.0O-14.SO; common
medium heifer. I11.0O-14.9O: odd head
good belters to S13.00; cutters down to
Jft.oo: caner-cutter cow. largely t7.50
10.00: fat dairy type cows 110.50-11.73:
medium-good sausage bulla $10.00-12.00:
medium-good bee! bulls tl.2S-13.00: odd
selected vealers up to $17.00; good -choice
grade, mostly tlS.SO-lt.SO.
Salable sheep 500: tout 1190: market
K. rmw and ellU 170-302 lbs.
$15.75; good sows and Tight stags $15.00,
leeaer pigs scarce; cnoicv iiuubu. .w
lbs. quaUbl. to t21.00.
Salable sheep SO0; total tll.90; market
active: steady; spring lambs top 25
cent, higher: good-cholc. springers $13.75
mna,Tv .loot few to 114.29: food
71 lb. feeders tl2.00; common 03 lbs.
ts.oo; meaium-cnoic. snom i.mo. ."
13.00; good shorn ewe. $6.79; wooled
ewes to $8.90.
CHICACO, Jun. (AP-WTA1 Sal
able hogs S0O0: total 11.000; active,
fully steady, good and choice barrows
and gilt. 140-lb. up celling; good and
choice sows $14.00. Compleus clearance.
Salable cattle 13,000; total 13.900;
salable calvea 700; total 700; choice
steers steady to 19 cenU lower; medium
and good grade. 29 cent, off; market
slow at decline; larg.ly steer run,
good and choice grade predominating;
top $17.00. paid for 1300-lb. averages;
several loads $17.79 to 17.95; bulk $19.50
to 17.50; heifer, weak to 25 cente lower;
strict) choice lOBB-lb. averages $17.65;
strictly good beef cow. weak, all others
and canners and cutter, steady; bulls
steady to strong, heavy sausage offer
ings to $13.50 and beef bulls to $19.50;
vealers unchanged at $16.90 down.
Stock cattle scare, with undertone
firm.
Salable sheen 1000: total sheep 6000:
steady, odd packages native spring
lambs $15.50 to 10.00; full load medium
and good around 100-lb. grassy old
crop wooled lambs $19.00; shorn native
ewes at $6.00 to 7.79, latter price popular
on gooa sna cnoic. Kina.
Mr. and Mrs. Herring took a
filcnlc dinner over to Spring
uke and surprised Gcorgo Koh
ler Sunday and visiting all day
wun mm.
Gus Kohlcr of Etna, who went
to Portland for exams, went on
to Scnttlo for a short visit there.
The rain is letting all the
ditch riders have a vacation.
George Murphy was shopping
Monday, - .
Many of t.) farmers are ex
pecting to have io replant some
of their potuto land again due
to the continued wet weather.
Gordon Mallory, Mickey Rez
ono, Douglas Kohlcr and Martin
Snyder enjoyed Monday evening
at the R. H. Anderson home,
playing five hundred.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hess'
granddaughter of Langcll valley.
spent several days hera the past
ween.
Tommy Hopkins passed the
army test in Portland a few
days ago and is now awaiting his
call in a few weeks.
Dean Nicols purchased Gor
don Mallory's Chevrolet sedan
last week.
Several from this vicinity at
tended the Fort Klamath bond
sale.
Grandma Mallory, mother of
Harold Mallory, arrived from
Stockton, Calif., Sunday morn
ing for an extended visit here.
The Vcrle Mallory family
from Weed, Calif., visited hero
Sunday also as Vcrlc's two sons
in service were homo and came
to see Gordon beforo he left.
The continual rains stopped
farm work here. On some places
there was too much water.
Mr. Woodard, a former resi
dent here but now a govern
ment ditch rider, had quite a
time diverting the excess water
into ditches so as not to let It
injure farm crops. Water is be
ing turned Into the big canal.
LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE
You may be able to drive your
Car from thp AmnrWn .nnlln.
ent to Russia and on to Europe
some aay. some modern engin
eers say it is not too fantastic to
dream of a tunnel beneath Ber
ing Strait.
VITAL STATISTICS
MeAULirrE Born at Illllsld. hos-tlu!-
.,?.u.n k1Mai to Mr' and Mrs. Jack
McAullffe. 2034 Kane, a girl. Weight:
' SVJ"1' l ounces. Name: Patricia.
RANKIN Born at Hillside hospital,
June 4, 1043, lo Mr. and Mr.. Gcorgo
WHEAT
PHIPAfiO Juns ft (API Wheat and
rye frequently slipped more than a cant
today and most of the remainder of
the grain futures list barely steady to
weiK, anon covinng ana commercial
buying caused a rally during the final
nour out uie recovery was no. cum-nUt
Julv corn, which traded at the I1.18tt
ceiling, and barley, were the only grains
to resist me sen -on.
Commission houses sold much more
grain than they bought and pit traders
were on tha short side most of the es-
Factors behind the liquidation Includ
ed oeiier crop weainer in uia miauie
west and heavy receipt! of cash grain
at terminal markets1.
At the finish wheat was H to iVtc
lower than yesterday's close. July
S1.66H-'. Corn was unchanged to off
ifac, July 1.18'. Oats were up lie to
down 9,'c, July 649,-jC. Rye was V to
lo lower, July l. 41-1. 41",. Barley was
up v to w, Juiy ti.iuft.
WATCH THERMOMETERS GO UP
remember, tho bigjior they go tho
more troublesome is itch of minor akin
troubles, chafe, baby'a diaper rash. Get
Mcxs&na soothing medicated powder.
Give
Your Feet An
Ice-Mint Treat
Get lUppr. Coofaj Relief For
Buminf Callouses Pot Spring, in Your Step
Don't groan about tlrad, burning feet.
Don't moan about callouses. Get busy and
give them an J!int treat. Feel the com.
fortlng, soothing coolness of Ice-Mint drlv.
ing out Aery burnlnr ... aching tiredness.
Bub Ic-Mlnt otct those ugly b.rd old
corn, and callouses, a. directed. Be. bow
white, cream-like, medicinal Ice-Mint belpt
soften them up. 0t toot happr today U.
1-Mlnt way. At all drugging.
Rankin. Merrill. Oregon, a boy. Weight:
uuunus . ounce, name: ueorge Kay.
flSCUS Born at Klamath VaM.y ho..
pltal. June 3, 1049, to LI. and Mrs. John
A. riseus, 1537 Ivory, a boy. W.lght:
9 pounds.
HODGSON Bom at Klamath Vall.y
hospital, June 4, 1043, lo Mr. and Mrs.
L. C Hodgson, DOS N. 4Ul, a girl. W.lght:
0 pounds 4 ounces.
ARNOLD Born at Klamath Valley
hospital, June S, 1049, to Mr. and Mrs,
S?K J.- -Arnold, 3000 Cannon, girl.
Weight 7 pounds 19 ounces.
ALT Born at Klamath Valley hos
pital. Jun. 9. 1049, to Mr. and Mrs. Roy
r. Alt, Malln, Oregon, boy. Weight:
8 pounds 12' ounces.
sHEltlDAN Born at Klamath Valley
hospital, June 9. 1049, to Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Sheridan. 4092 Miller, a boy. Weight:
8 pounds 13H ounces.
TRAW Born at Klamath Valley hos
pital, June 9, 1049, to Mr. and Mrs. c. n.
Traw, 1804 Leroy, a boy. Weight: 7
pounds 8 ounces.
WEATHER
Tuesday, June g, JB45
Tolling
The Editor
ln isgibly M 0N1 ilol "'"
Ml., .nd must M !
Wlealnl IheM ml, srs warmis w
it m .-.I KHIIiir To
our good friends and neillibor,
tho m.ny flno ropi we hv
become acquainted with while
driving cab and tho " M-"
from tho Bnrracki und air line
that It has boon our privllcgo
and pleamiro to inrve, we are
using thla meani of telling you
"goodbye." . ,
Our now home In a ranch on
the outh fork of tho John Day
river in central Oregon. H lj i
huntor'a parndlno tinning at tho
back door and door o thick that
they are a nuisance. It will be
a plonsure to bo hogt and hoto
to any of you, should you fool
the urgo of the wide open spaces.
Leaving Klamath Kalis after
n... It mti. hrtmA fnr lfi
years tins not boon accomplished
entirely wiinout iranon.
Wa hnrm to alwava remain,
sincerely yours,
(Sinned) Shorty and Mom
(Pat s Cab) , ...
Air. and Mrs. Wlliara tuipiiu,
Paulina, Oregon.
Flashes of
Life
Eusena
Klamath Falls . M
Sacramento , 7ft
North Bend !V7
Portland M
Rno 63
San Francisco 00
Seattle BO
Med ford fWJ
Red Bluff 77
Max. Mtn, Preclp.
47 .04
.33
.00
.01
.00
.00
.02
.00
.01
WsiklnA.
cloudy with scattered showers today, to
and Ore on Partly
.luuuv wiiii sinncicu Rliuvvcil UJtjay, to
night and Thursday. Little temperature
Northern California Partly cloudy to
day, tonight and Thursday, with scat
tered showers In the mountains. Slight
ly warmer In the northern portion.
Eur
KLEAN-QUIK
"Nothing Better"
KLEANER
Solentlflo Household Clsantr
Bay From Independent Grocery
ICruMaV asm J ?
Mm ml a I 111
y.ur MHMy fcack if
10., SO. cStf
EARLY
pnBTt.AND Ore.. Juno 6 lP)
nation board No. 1 has denied
the reaurst of a woman for ten
pounds of canning sugar for her
baby.
When the clerk asked the
baby's name the woman replied
with devastating femlnlno logic:
'Oh. tho bnby isn't bom yet,
but I want to get my canning
done beforo I go to the hos
pital."
FOND MOTHER
LOS ANGELES, June 8 (AV
Henrietta Is a busy humming
bird. She has two nests about five
feet apnrt. In ono she sits on
her eggs until they are warm.
Then sho hops out to food
hungry blrdleU In the other
nest then back quickly to the
eggs again. .
How sho acquired tho extra
family Is not known.
...
EASY WINNER
CHICAGO. Juno 0 (rTV-Attorney
Nicholas Caruso, repre
senting Mrs. Catherine Lowe, 21,
ln her suit for divorce from her
husband William, 29, a Jockey,
told Superior Judge John A.
Sborbaro:
"I don't know whether your
honor is acquainted with race
track phraseology, but Mrs.
Lowe was left at tho post."
(Mrs. Lowe charged desertion.)
"Well, she's an odds-on favor
Ito to win this race," Judge
Sbnrbnro observed as he signed
tho dlvorco decree.
Paper Pick-Up Set .
By Jaycees Sunday
A paper pick-up will be held
by the Klamath county Junior
chamber of commerce on Sun
day, June 10. All of the city
and suburban areas will be cov
ered, accordina to William Kunr,
chairman of tho drive.
Bundles should be tied secure
ly and left on the curb Satur
day night,' Kunz said, In order
for the pick-up to get off to an
early start. Residents of Klam
ath Falls and outlying areas may
also deposit their waste paper
at the main salvage ocpoi at
608 Market at any time, -The
need for paper la still ur-
gent, Kunz stated, as stock piles
ave decreased notably. An
enormous amount of paper Is
now belns sent to the South Pa
cific for various military uses
and residents of Klamath Falls
and vicinity are strongly re
quested to cooperate In the drive.
Post To Ask Support
Of Peace Draft Plan
PORTLAND, June 9 VP)
Portland Post No. 1, American
Legion, largest post In Oregon,
will ask the state's congressional
delegation to support universal
compulsory military service leg
islation now before congress.
Edward J. Elvers was nom
inated commander for 1945-46
term at last night's meeting.
Secret Charts Of GermQl
Minefields Taken In Seo
Baiile Before lnvasion
bfo 1,1'ld. J
lm ii... . ... "over .
mm
On tho li(,t . .
slowlJ ; Wsrihli'
thn , . ',7",u tlld,7
""tor. not Vo,
wr,,,owUd? i
m.1. T.i " tin Ust"?
"if ii ."iip.
is going 0 bovemJ
lsvld.vo.t said. (IHi
By GEORGE TUCKER
PAHIS, (II Secret churls of
Gorman iniiivtlelus captured In
a night sea bultlu baroly six
hours bodire H-hour, O-Day,
August IS, 1044, enabled the
allies to Invade tho south of
France without tho loss of a
single wursiiip, ,
i was uioio ana saw tt, and
for days I sat on the story ln an
agony of suspense, tortured by
tho fear that soma othar correi-
Condent would pick It up und
nil it through censorship ahoud
oi me. mu tno navy s iron onv
MONTANA GOP
CANDIDATE
11
S BALLOT
Keno
According to relatives of Lt.
Robert Puckctt, two cards have
been received from him since he
was reported as a prisoner of
war last December.
DEVELOPING
ENLARGING
PRINTING
PHOTO SERVICE
211 Underwood Bid
O We Have It O
A xoof coating that Is guar
anteed to outlast any othar
type of tar or asphalt coat
ing. Will not chick, crack,
flow, bubble or burn, Wa
will gladly demonstrate.
Grems Roofing
Service
Phone 4838
337 E. Main
Approval Meneer-rilnlkol.
Applicators
HELENA. Mont.. Juno S 111
Republican Wesley A. D'Ewart,
state senator and rancher of
Wllsall. defeated Democrnll,-
State Representative Len C
Grayblll of Great Falls In Mon
tana's second (eastern) district
congressional race yesterday in
an election which both major
parties viewed as significant as
a posstoio clue to tho 1040 elec
tions,
The snoclal election, first
since President Truman assumed
office, wos to fill the vacancy
icii iy uio tionih in Washington
lust January 14 of Reo. James F.
O'Connor. Livingston domocrut.
Two other cand dates. Robert
Ycllnwtall of Lodge Grass, full
blooded Crow Indian, Indttpcml.
ent, and Socialist E. Sprlggs of
tvyoia, wore inr outdistanced,
unofficial returns from 408 of
tho district's 7S4 precincts gave
D'Ewart 21.0B0 votes, Grayblll
17.800. Sprlgga 105 and Yellow
toll 2S53.
Lester If. Loble. state demo
cratic committee chairman, con
gratulated D'Ewart and said
"we wish him success." Gray
blll also extended congratula
tions. Rep. Halleck (R-Ind.), chair
man of tho republican congress
ional committee, said In Wash.
Ington. "It give clear evidence
that the people are turning to
the republican party and its
policies for leadership and guid
ance. Tho voters of Montana
have forerot next year's polit
ical weather."
Willamette River
Rise Indicated
PORTLAND, Juno 8 IP)
Dock hands in low storage river
plors today began moving goods
lo nigncr levels as wcainor on
reau officials predicted tho Wil
lamctto river will rlsa above tho
18-foot flood stage Sunday.
Columbia river waters, now
abovo flood stage, have inun
dated low fields and much of
Sauvlcs Island. Dnmugo it ex
pected to be light.
Tulelake Principal
Resigns Position
TULELAKE Francis G.
Burke, principal of the Tulelake
elementary school for two years,
has resigned to become Siskiyou
county rural school supervisor,
tho new position to become ef
fective July 1.
He Is leaving thla week with
Mrs. Burko and thoir three chil
dren to make their homo in
Yrcka.
No successor to tho position
left vacant has as yet been an
nounced by the locul school
board.
The rlng-nccked peasant, an
immigrant from China, Is tho of
ficial state bird of South Dakota.
TIHTZ
COLOR
SHAMPOO
CAKE
Nsw Color Colt Shampoo,
and Tints Holt .luxuriously
without Extra Mnat,
sis
COMII in r INADII
Jet It Today At Drat and Tofletrle Counter.
o'clock tho ncxl Al
wrl II. J,.1IP,. X
wept gemly overlMH
Icy .hawl 'effort Stt&i
As fur ii, iR, Cyc toJiS1
hill were rt.,L l?"
Slimmer rn. u,uni
Suddenly glm(t, b .
-' " " III I, Cinli:
crying "two of our Kl
are out thoro blowing ffi
of rnil, nil,,.."
A .in.. ,W,IWPW
vettes pn patrol out Iron J
through tho dorknwitoaj.
destroyer Endlcott, tVJ
per m mat (loiiroyer, I wiit,
n-i. c..., ....... " .'
. ,,v i.imti-uus iuni mins'
and scared n bullieve. rw.
"''' inirai lino llsmtllUtl
Instantly. A few mlnuUtlo
tho guns cut loots iiiisBj
.ou.ivis we renmti
laconic mesuRt "target dtaik
water. Crew sbandonliu fa1
Iliitkeley at once sent itai
lne ruirtv whlrh hrnMa,i
the shin's piper.. WhlkiCf
mnns dldn t destroy una h
myaicry. tncy run pirajl
time, at least 19 minus) Mn!
Ml1, ,,,,,, ,,,, . (,,,,.
Hut they didn't ind M
now ine secret ensru MUB
minefields along the Mute
count of Frnnso fell Into at
nanus, ay uawn iw ass
sweepers were proving tbfUr
den nnnnuewsyi thraithk
minefields by running Im
them. We hnd or mlnmtw
dnmngi'd, that's all. but est I
single troop irantponoriip
Airlines Hope For
Service To Klomotii
United Alrllnw ll nopeM
starting main line spata
Vlamalh F-stlUB
near future, according lW
dent W. A. Patterson oi a"
linos, who dlicuJMd wjo
i- Mifnrrf Monday win m
. a. I.-H rAp!l
Pnttorson li on a w -
west. stopnln si ouo r
served by United.
,, ill ,1.., Iln Mt'llltO
through Klamath U now W'
tne ctvii """'""r Tj js
hearing has been held. J
. U. aviWM I H
lion niny uo k---- ., , i
. " . . .l.laul iMin
time. Patterson "'"..Tjil
tlmo would be lost bjfWI
It gets on okay on m r-i
here. ..,.,,k,
He added tnai n:j
.ih.hmi in st.rt inen
operation without dclW
AIRPLANE PIIOTJ
..a PAENGlU
If. lnsursncs U iril
, you now at
)! rates.
AT
III N. 1U
HYPERACID
DISTRESS
Vou must sal f ART, ErCTIV KILICT &A,!11
dlscamforL or sour money back. Get Ire. Informs"" . I
H. Tabl.U. at II
EVEHBODY'S CUT-HATE DRU phltfJ
SOS Main St.
RADIO REPAIR
By Exper! Technloians .
GOOD STOCK OF AVAILA6LI
TUBES-PARTS-AERIALS
For All Makes of Radios
ZEMAN'S
Quick, Guaranteed Servle .JjH
so n. yrn -,.,( its
mww. a-.sna nuuiyuu... j -
-i