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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1945)
rinii MMMinrnr DECREASE AS The number of lirmi In Wasco county, as iliown by tho preliminary count of returns of the 1045 consul of aurlcul tura win B02, hi compared with iuut in iimu, aim huh in iujo. Thin was announced today by ' R. L. Aekcrmun, mpcrvlsor for tho 1040 ta nil census In tho third Orciion census dliitrlct with headquarter! at Klamath rain. The total land In fnrmi In Wco county, according to pre liminary 1045 census count wns flH,i,;nu acres, as coinporou wun SIZE BOOSTED . 879,848 aero In IIMU. and Hiu. 286 acrca in 1033, Average size of farms shown In tho prelim inary 1045 census count for Wasco county wiib 1030 acroii, compared with 870 acres In 1940, and 01)0 acres In 1IKI5. In announchiK the 11145 census totals of farms mid land in farms In Wasco county, Sup ervisor Ackormun pointed out that the figures aro preliminary and subject to correction. Final , tabulations of Wasco county y farm census returns will be ' made by the bureau of tho census and announced from Washington when completed, he laid. Secret Airline Service Operated Out Of Sweden (Continued From Page One) their evory move was noted by nazl agents. The crewmen changed uni forms for civilian clothing be fore leaving their planes, and I carried passports and civilian flying licenses, but It was diffi cult to keep their Identities from tho Germans, to whom they become known as "ersatz" American civilians. Tlmo and again their roomi were ran sacked by gaslapo agents seek ing Information about their routes and schedules. Passengers Varlad Among the passengers were hundreds of Interned American airmen, Norwegian soldiers, dip lomats, interned nationals and high officials of many govern ments. Including Norwegian, French, Dutch and Russian. On one occasion the personnel of the Norwegian government In exile was flown from London to Sweden. Gen. Hoaa disclosed that ana of the most daring operations was' the evacution of iomo 2000 trained Norwegian soldiers across German-occupied Norway v to Britain, lust prior' to the in- ,a vision of France. Tho Swedish lovernment. after negotiations, had approved the release of the Norwegians, but Just about tho time the first night was scnea uled. it was discovered the Gor man! had learned of the plan and had sinned counter-mea-lures. Fall to Oat Plana The Germans alerted at least 2S0 Luftwaffe night fighters at fields In southern Norway, and had all suspected routes bristling with anti-aircraft and coastal de fense gum. But they failed to snooi down a single plane dur ing the operation, which extend ed over a period of several weeks. Much credit for thil remark able record in avoiding enemy Interception, Hong said, went to keen counter-intelligence work. So much was known of the u,h,r(ahn,t. tt riMfmnn Via I (nr. I lea and fighter bases that ATC 6iauc0 uig uiucrHiuro Bun t-tf akotas successfully dodged all of them. Only one plane wos lost oetween niarcn, 1U14 and January 1, 1D43. Scouts,. Camp Fire : Girls To Meet , Robert Lamott, Boy Scout ex ecutive, Mrs, Roy Carter of the Girl Scouta and Jewel Contrail, representing tho Camp Fire Girls, are calling an important meeting of these three organiza tions at the Pino Trco theatre on Saturday morning - at.. 10 yo'clock. : - r Thli meeting li particularly important, and members of all three groups are urged to attend. - ) There's no slums In having piles. Any physician will tall you that! But It It a s name to auAet needen pain. You cn do something to re llava tha irritation, soreness and burning discomfort of , simple piles or hemorrhoids. Try Urtuntlm Reettt Cones, a nationally recognised special wot House Defeats OPA Limitation WASHINGTON, Juno 22 (IP) The houie today defeated a republican-sponsored effort to hold OPA new lease on life to six months Instead of one year. The vote was 177 to 126. The voto leaving Inluct that section or a pending UI'A renew al resolution calling for a full year'a extension came after Speaker Rayburn (D-Tex.) walk ed Into the house well and ap pealed to tha membership not to destroy OPA. Such action, he said, would bring "Inflation In which many people won't have anything to eat and wear. "This is a confusing and de- structlve amendment," Rayburn dcclured of tho tlx month limi tatlon proposal. TO PORTLAND, June 22 (IP) Sovantv-flve Unlvorsity of Ore gun medical school graduates will rocclvo doctor of medicine degrees here tonight, Capt, L. T. Coggvshall, Klam ath Falls Marino Uarrucks sen ior medical officer, will deliver tho commencement uddrcss to the first class completing a four year course in threo years. Graduates includo Victor J. Plestrak and Robert Le Roy Range, Eugene; William Martin Garjobst, C'orvollls; Willlum Er win Murphy, Lnkeviow: Tyra Thornton Ilutchens and Woslcy R, Wclsscrt, Newberg; Marvin M. Lacy and William E. Snell, Salem. Newspaper Publisher Association To Meet EUGENE. June 22 (P) The SBlh annual Oregon Newspaper Publisher association meeting will be held here June 28-30, with wartime newspaper prob lems tno prime spot on tne agen da. An attendance limited to 80 will hear Admiral Harold B. Miller, head of navy public re lation, explain tne navy s Dup licity program, and Cmdr. Paul C. Smith, San Francisco Chron icle editor now on leave with the navy, speak on war news coverage. Other speakers Include Ted R, Gamble, national director of the war finance division: Robort W. Kennry, California attorney-general; and Fred E. Hampson, vet eran Associated Press war cor respondent, Launching Of USS Ernie Pyie-Delayed VANCOUVER, Wash.. June 22 IIP) Launching of the S.S. Kmle Pyle, a troopship named for tho late war correspondent columnist, has been postponed from Saturday to Monday noon. Kaiser Co., Inc., announced to- uay. Babette Johnson, of Dallas, Tex., Pylo'i niece, will be soon. sor, and her mother, Mra. Roy Johnson, Stillwater, Minn., his sister. Will be matron of honor. Lt. Cmdr. Max Miller, former reporter, columnist and author, will bo speaker. The ship will go down the ways whllo President Truman and his party ia visiting in the I'oriiana area. i Farm Wage Rates Up In State During Year WASHINGTON. June 22 JPi Although farm labor, decreased snarpiy in May and Juno com pared with 1844, farm wags rates In Oregon and Washing, ton gained steadily, the bureau ot agricultural economics re ported today. The wage rates already were more than double the 1042 rates. Increases on rates be tween April Land June 1: Ore gon with board, from $132 to ji.iu; wiinout Board, $188 to $171. Washington with board, $138 to $144; without, $176 to All Leather WORK GLOVES OREGON WOOLEN STORE 00 Main formula, by the makers of famous Untutntlnt. ; Milllonshava been sold became they help relieve peln, fight Infection, promote healing, tafuentm Steele! Cenee Km let IIA..,llJt.n. tu.H.ik. Utt directed. Your monny bick n HiiMH. ai arus Mom A Nerwldi Product B-Z9S BUST NIP TARGETS; LID NG MADE (Continued From Page One) aid fall of both the wrecked airdrome and the flaming cross road city of Liuchow were Immi nent, Drop 3000 Tons B-20s packed 3000 tons of ex plosives In today's precision dayngnt siriKO at inc nure naval arsenal and live aircraft (actor los. The Kure arsenal, covering 11,000,000 square feet and man ufacturing naval equipment ranging Irom fuses up to 16 inch guns, was the largest re maining unwrccked in Japan. B-20s previously knocked Ja pan's two best, at Hiro and Osaka. Pacific fleet headquarters pointed out fighter planes and bombers from Okinawa. 325 miles south of Japan, will be ablo to support un invasion of cither Japan or China. Japanese remaining on the is land wera surrendering In droves In response to picas from loudspeakers on American-Japanese interpolators; being elimi nated by infantrymen and ma rines using flame-throwers and demolitions; blowing themselves up, or drowning themselves in the surf. , Admiral Chester W. Nlmltz reported "numerous" drownings Thursday and 1700 surrenders, bringing tha campaign's total of prisonors to 4000 a record. Merrill Morlo "Bud" Woodlcy, S 1c, U. S. navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Woodley, who has been stationed at Treasure Island, ar rived home Tuesday morning for a 19-day furlough. Woodlcy enlisted last October 3, and was sent to San Diego for his in itio! service. Ho has three weeks at sea as part of his training program. Ho is a graduate of the Malin high school. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Suty of the Merrill highway will have with them this weekend all children in the family and a re union is anticipated if Mrs. Suty'a health permits. She Is in at tno family home. Two members of the family, a son and a daughter, are In the service and both received fur loughs at the snmc lime. Lt. Antono M. Suty, pilot of a B-2S, and serving as an in structor at Enid, Okla., Is home on leave until June 20. He has been In the sorvlce for threo yean end has been recommend ed for efficiency and capable performance. . Sgt. Pauline Suty, Wac, who has seen overseas e service in both Africa and Italy and is now stationed at Camp Roberts, Is also home. Sgt. Suty, with Doris McCord, also of this com munity, wax among the first Klamath county girls to enter the service. Sho was overseas for 22 months, serving in the c o m m u n ications department, most of the time at Algiers. She later went to Italy. Miss Mc Cord is still in England. Miss Suty Is serving in the office of the motor corps at Camp Rob erts in a secretarial capacity. Two other members of the family, Rosie and Helen, both sophomores at the University of Washington, Seattle, will ar rive Saturday. Rosie is major ing In physical education and Helen is preparing for the nurs ing profession. A sister, Merle, lives at home, and a fourth daughter, Mrs. Stephan Takacs,' lives with her family near Tulclake. Classified Ads Bring Results. TRAVEL PROBLEMS? Seats Ara Available On TRAIL WAYS Crimson and Craam Clipper Buses HOLD EVERYTHING! ft! JUsa -i r to m r mj xnxt "Sometimes I wonder if we haven't relaxed a little too much since we licked Ger many!" POLES TO BE ASKED (Continued from Pago One) British and American govern ments some time ago hud re vculcd to the Russians the names and functions of Polish leaders, who later were accused of hampering tho red army. "Those men certainly were not in position to engage in ony plotting,"! Arclszewski sold. "They knew that their names and positions were wcu Known to tho soviet government. Washington Man To Head Fish Commission PORTLAND, June 22 (IP) AmlA .1 Siinmnlii. llwaco Wash., was appointed master fish warden of Oregon Thursday by the Oregon state tisn com Suomcla, managing biologist of the Washington fisheries de partment, will take over his now nnt AuBUfit 1. M. T. Hoy will continue as secretary of tho commission un der thc-tltlc of assistant master riah unrrlon lrvinn French, now field superintendent, .will re nlnro lli.nl, C Mitchell as chief fish culturlst. Mitchell will bc- rnmn nrfn1 rnmmlsslon renre- scntative on the proposed Co lumbia river oasin acvciupinuiib plans. Road To Paradise To Open Sunday TACOMA. June 22 (PI The "road to paradise," Mount Rai nier national park, will open to public travel next Sunday, John U. t'reston, parte supennienQcm, announced today. Tho cast side road, between Ohananccosh Hot Springs, Chi nook pass, and White river, is now open oui me xhkiiiih phi road above White river bridge will probably remain closed un til July 1 or later, depending on mow conditions. Paradise Inn will open next Thursday, and until then hotel and cabin service will be avail able at Longmire. The mongoose, noted killer of poisonous snakes, consumes the entire body of its victim, poison and all. Til MAIN STmSKT T.W MO V t ". I C Buses Leave Klamath Falls East Bound At -1:20 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. Daily TRAVELING TIME TO Boise 24 hn. Salt Lake 34 hr. Denver SO hn. Omaha 70 hri. Chicago 80 hn. PACIFIC MARINES (Continued From Page One) figures in that theater, General llowlln' Mad ' Hmitn. 38-Year Veteran A veteran of 38 yean in the marine corps, Gen. Gciger is also noted as a pioneer marine aviator and as a leader in ma rine aerial operations in both World wars. Gciger. who was appointed a lieutenant general only three days ago, wai the fifth marine to become an aviator. He or ganized and led the first ma rine airwlng on Guadalcanal in 1B4Z. He left that post to come to Washington ai director of ma rine aviation. On November 10. 1943, he becamo commander of the 1st marine amphibious corps dur ing the Bougainville battle, re lieving Gen. Vandegrift. Its units later formed part of the 3rd amphibious corps. Few Voters Cast Ballots In Portland PORTLAND, June 22 (JP) A few curly-arriving voters strag gled into polling places today, but Oregon's special election seemed to have aroused little in terest. By mld-mornlng, several pre cincts reported only a fourth as many voters as in last Novem ber's election. No lines formed at the polls and on the streets little talk revolved around the voting. ' James W. Glcason, Multno mah county registrar of elec tions, said the balloting seemed to be on a level with other spe cial elections of past years. Trip To Canada Set For Convalescents FARRAGUT, Idaho. June 22 (IP) A six-day trip to Calgary, Alberta, for the "Stampede" there July 9 to 14 has been ar ranged for about 30 convales cent patients at Farragut Naval hospital, it was announced to day. The patients will make the trip by railroad, each paying his own expenses. The vacation will count as part of the serv icemen's annual leave. I0T PEBSPIRWB Aching Feet Your ft but 1 t? Infl.m.d that jroa Iklnlc you 1 nolbfr Mto. Your hoet nnr ! , U the, cmlini rilhl Into Ihe Bert. Itel Bel: H ov'r with lh pm in tot-ISi-You'd nr'lnl 10 wl .'lt. Try Ihii To or Ihrtf wlKnent ulei jnu set tho uronio ol Tour l'l now you U know tne w7 to o..u fort. You py little more for Emerjld OU bul Oh. Boyl the rtiutrt you iet Salltfitlion luiriirtud or m"ny Oct imcma Ull m mnj i - - Saptr Cat-Koto TJrnr Loo tfondrleko Dress rPluUo. Quuikmtfr-t DEVELOPING ENLARGING PRINTING PHOTO SERVICE 211 Underwood $ldg. NOW AVAILABLE (Te All Won) Adding Machines Calculators New Royal Typewriter! desks cbaiks rn.ii Beryice ee All Moeaino PIONEER PRINTING AND STATIONERY CO. 122-124 S. 9th, Klamath Falls GOING EAST? EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) men to somewhere in the neigh borhood of 2000. We'd better watch these 300 miles of Chinese coastline. For mosa or no Formosa, something might happen there. We need airfield space, and there's a lot of it in these 300 miles. Much of it is almost as close to Japan as Okinawa. . . e e . 'TWERE Is another significant hint in the news.' Two generals of the army Marshall and Arnold appear be fore the house of representatives to explain the 38 billion dollar army supply bill, whose purpose, they point out. is to speed vic tory over Japan "by an over whelming application of force." In sharp contrast to the past, there is LITTLE SECRECY. Marshall and Arnold left much of their closed-door testimony in the printed record, where it is available to anyone. Thus they say to the Japs: "Here it is. Take a look at it If you think you can get any consolation out of It." That spells CONFIDENCE. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE JACKSON, who heads the American war criminals organi zation, announces today that the United States plans to prosecute the German war criminals (presumably those over whom we have Jurisdiction) in ONE COL LECTIVE trial which, he says, will start at the earliest possible moment, "just as soon as we have a reasonably complete case." He HOPES the trials may start before the end of summer. The British foreign office says today that representatives of Britain, U. S., Russia and France will open discussions in London next week to draw up a list of major war criminals and settle plans for their trial. Great Britain manufactures 500 different kinds of safety ra zors, according to estimates. fSiTirni iimTI W Foa Sale Various Buildings 'Time Off icq. and. Warehouse - One 1942 Chevrolet, 4-Yard Dump Truck. Tan and Yx Flat Bed Truck 1939 Chevrolet One Vi Tan Pick-up 1941 Chevrolet . One Vi Ton Pick-up 1940 Plymouth SURPLUS BUILDING MATERIAL Brennan and Cahoon 132 S. 7th a am -trsr china, glow. em. w !T?K9 araL" RRBLsT "danger danger . , hygienicon la Friday, June 22, 1145 SEVERE SHORTAGE (Continued From Page One) from Its present staggering pro portions, in view of the billions of board feet required to build new bases for the full-scale Pa cific offensives and for the box ing and shippinx of munitions, vehicles and supplies being transferred from Europe. Efforts Speeded Complaints from congress men and the lumber trade about the volume of V. S. lumber be ing sent to repair and rebuild devastated Europe an amount put by WPB at less than 1 per cent of American supplies have spurred efforts to see what Europe can do about meeting its own needs. A WPB mission headed by J. Philip Boyd, lumber division director, now is conferring in London and on the continent to see what can be supplied by French, German and Scandi navian mills. This mission probably will re sult in some kind of internal management of lumber supplies, similar to that exercised over leather and some other materi als by the combined (British-Canadian-American) raw mate rials board. ' Swim Trunks Beach Shorts Tennis Shorts 12.50 to $5.95 28 to 42 waist In wool, rayon, cotton RUDY'S 800 Main Phone 7751 CLCANSnv Tvun tFRl6EAT0? mo tiANrTAJlon.: trHeifSfirro?D SPOUA&, TOO! I .tUskf food ess s deod- whit, cotton, and hnen whUe trllabaldirac, XI 1. is a , SpXTdTcboords .are not ond othergerm . riorox-Clean . .. zone." Clorox-t-.eon . ,.f , zon ,1.. .I.nn . , , HERALD AND MEWS SEVEN 1 Confiscation Of 'J Property Ordered PRAGUE, June 22 (P)prs. ' Ident Benes today ordered tha confiscation of all farms ami' corporations in Czechoslovakia 1 belonging to Germans, Hungar ians and "traitors and nazi col laborationists of any national ity." The decree, intended as tha first step in eliminating influ ences which led to betrayal of the Czechoslovak nation in 1938, wai countersigned by all mem bers of the government. It was , issued by the minister of agrt- ' culture, Julius Durcs. It was estimated that 270,000 small farms owned by Germans, 1 largely in the Sudeten area, ' would be embraced in the con- ' fiscation procedure and that, in- eluding the families of owners, 1,500,000 of the country's popu lation would be involved. - . The mail rata wn I half ' ounce at the beginning of tha ' Pony Express service. Fold it up It's self-repleating! Roll it up It's -crush-resistant! ' . Sizes lfi 24-30 . 9 THE Town Shop Main at Fifth w i 'fi vs i I 7T ifil TTCESJ'iUJluy J. K. Sayre, Agr. Phone 6074