WO HERALD AND MEWS
INK-UPENDS
LONG FIGHT IN
PHILIPPINES
(Continued From Page One)
rhlch entered It May 81 from
he south, and the 11th air
rne division, which had para
huted into the north end near
kparri, wound up "the major
ihase of the northern Luzon
ampaign."
"Great Difficulties'
"No terrain has ever present
d greater logistical difficulties
md none has ever provided an
idversary with more naturally
mpregnable strongholds," Mac
krthur said.
"The losses inflicted on the
ncmy (in all North Luzon)
rere heavy 113,593 dead, with
he graves of many other thous
ands located but uncounted, and
everal thousand prisoners. Our
osses were 3793 dead. 34 miss-
ng and 11,531 wounded, a total
if 15,178. Cur troops comprised
he first corps and the North
juzon guerrillas, all of the sixth
irmy, closely and most effect
very supported by the far east
irn air force and the seventh
leet.
"The entire island of Luzon,
unbracing 40.420 square miles
, . is now liberated."
Mindanao Mon-Up
In effect, MpcArthur wrote
iff the Philippine reinvasion,
which be?an last October at
jeyte. The only othe- active
lector is the southern island of
Mindanao, and today's commun
que phrased operations there
y the eighth army as a mop-up
if a disoreanized foe.
The bulk of the estimated
10,000 Japanese which had been
xttled up in Cagayan valley
led the floor east and west into
forested mountain regions.
E
DEIWIDS OF REDS
(Continued From Page One)
issary any communication on
v?" ' V S , u i
lembly or the Turkish people,
dnce the problem at present is
either definite nor decisive,"
tie paper added.
It added that "premature ex
dtement is unnecessary."
"Instead," it said, "the nation
ihould look up to its govern
nent, which is giving the sub
ect the required attention,
ibove all, it is necessary to
iwait the evolution of events."
Saddle Club Meets
In New Rooms
I The Saddle club held a special
nee ting in its new club
rooms, which has been recent
ly equipped and decorated at the
-airgrounds. Plans to entertain
rjsiting saddle clubs and posses
vere completed.
Those who attended were
Billy Adams, Barbara McKoen,
Mabel Liskey, Beth Chase, Clar
ce Moon, Alice Dale Ray, Gladys
Sogue, Ernie Read, Frances Mc
tfelly, ' Liza McDonald, Evie
Jrew, Lavina Mattoon, Ruthie
Christiansen, Jo Matt, Pearl
3rew, Blanche Harmon, Helen
Perry and Mary Scott.
' Insurance is a specialty, not
I sideline, with Hans Norland,
118 North 7th street,
ponUfUi THE BOND SHOW
fimiHiiin
ACTIONEM
IN THE TOUGHEST FIGHT IN
THE WAR IN THE PACIFIC!
Thursday. June 2, 194S
Anderson Pledges
WFA Check-Up
WASHINGTON, June 28 (VP)
An immediate WFA check-up
"and clean-up if necessary
was promised today by Repre
sentative Anderson (D-N.M.)
who moves into the cabinet as
secretary of agriculture Satur
day. His statement to a reporter
followed a report by a house
appropriations subcommittee ac
cusing the war food administra
tion of responsibility for food
losses running into millions of
dollars.
The subcommittee, concluding
a months' long investigation,
criticized WFA's warehousing
practices, said its records were
inadequate and incorrect and
charged some officials with de
liberately giving false iniorma
tion to congress.
SHAKE-UP Ml STATE
(Continued From Page One)
on the league's potent security
council.
Selection of Byrnes probably
would mean an almost com
plete turnover in the ranks of
assistant secretaries named
when Stettinius took office last
December and began reorganiz
ing the state department. The
only likely survivor of this
group is W uliam L. Clayton,
sistant in charge of economic
fairs, although others may oe
asked to stay on for awhile.
Grew May Get Post
Friends thought it likely that
if Byrnes gets the post said to
be the only one in the govern
ment he would be willing to
accept at this timethat an
other place also may be found
for Undersecretary Joseph C.
Grew, former ambassador to
Japan. .
The assistant secretaries in
clude Nelson A. Rockefeller, in
charge of Latin American af
fairs; and Archibald MacLelsh,
former librarian of congress
now in charge of public and
cultural relations.
Extension Of Wheat
Loan Program Set
CORVALLIS, June 28 (P)
Extension of the loan program
on 1944 wheat in farm storage
to April 30, 1946, was an
nounced by the state AAA com
mittee today.
Farmers holding 1944 wheat
which they have been unable
to deliver to commodity credit
because of limited transporta
tion and storage facilities may
extend the loans and store the
wheat until April 30, 1946. An
additional storage payment of
5 cents a bushel is allowed on
extended loans.
On extended loans where the
wheat is finally delivered to
commodity credit, no interest
will be charged after July 1,
1945, and final settlement will
be made under the parity pur
chase program.
Robertson Estate
Filed For Probate
The estate of the late C.S.
Robertson was filed for probate
Wednesday in the county clerk's
office, valued at approximately
$5000. Myrle C. Adams was ap
pointed as administrator of the
estate.
Robertson was president of
the First Federal Savings and
Loan association here and died
June 12, 1945.
MOK ACTION
K7
Storming of the beaches on two Jimal
Planting of the flag on Mt, Suribachl!
Flamethrowers In action against Jap In
fested caves! Smashing of defenses the
Japs took 20 years to bulldl Winning of
. the bate that brings the Jap homeland
only 4 bomber-hours owo"'
KUHS Classes Earn Marine Diploma
Sgt. Harold Tarallo of Chicago, Guadalcanal veteran now sta
tioned at the Marine Barracks, has completed the education he
interrupted to enlist in 1940 by attending daises at Klamath
Union high school. Shown here with Lt. J. Ott Schulte, educa
tional consultant at the Barracks who arranged to have Tarallo's
locally earned credits transferred to Crane Technical high in
Chicago, he is the first local marine to finish the necetiary
scholastic work for graduation under the new military educa
tional service. (USMC photo).
Guadalcanal Veteran Wins
High School Diploma Here
A lesson in determination for
a lot of people can be learned
from Sgt. Harold Tarallo. Guad
alcanal veteran, the first marine
from the local Barracks to re
ceive his high school diploma
under the marine corps' new
educational service.
Tarallo lacked credit for one
course commercial arithmetic
when he left Chicago's Crane
Technical high in June, 1940, to
join the marines, and has made
up that deficiency by attending
Klamath Union high school.
Service in Iceland, where he
was stationed at the outbreak
of the war, and combat duty in
the Solomons with the 2nd ma
rine division didn t leave him
much time for scholastic pur
suits, so when the chance came
TO
(Continued From Page One)
of a minor, two charges of
sodomy, and one charge of rape.
it is understood here that the
federal charge has been dropped .
and tnat Heuvel has been
turned over to Klamath county
authorities to face trial on the
four indictments.
Upon his arrival here he will
either be required to post $21,
000 cash bond or be committed
to the Klamath county Jail.
Increase In Payroll
Forecast For Ashland
ASHLAND, June 28 (IP) A
$200,000 Increase in Ashland's
payroll is ant'eipated with the
construction of three new saw
mills here.
Scheduled for immediate con
struction are a $30,000 planing
mill to be built by Arthur
Peters, and a $30,000 sawmill
to be built by Alley brothers.
Another $20,000 sawmill will be
constructed later by Pine Moun
tain Lumber company.
MILL TO CLOSE
ST. HELENS, June 28 (IP)
Pope and Talbot mill will close
July 1-10 for vacation for 350
employes.
tHJJJtAillJ.
Cont. Daily - Open 12:30
act HOST COMH.ni FILM siom
n LOUIS
Wail nir nrjnx
MnilKK HN6 HISTORVl
PLUS
EfllUHMinfATI
J?
1 1
if -W ! 1111 niilliiii
iSkfl FRWAT.
tV 8
i Ivs.'V M .k
he was quick to enroll in KUHS
to get the credits needed for
his diploma.
Tarallo went to school six
hours a day for six weeks,
passed his course and applied
to the Chicago school for his
graduation certificate.
The National Educational as
sociation, sponsors of the mili
tary high school training, has
authorized that certain phases
of military training be good for
nign school credit, enabling
many young men who came in
to the service as Tarallo did to
get at least some scholastic
credit for military work.
Basic training, or the ma
rines' "boot camp," for instance,
is good for one high school cred
it in physical education.
Therefore each man coming
to the Barracks Is interviewed
as to his previous education and
future ambitions and is encour
aged to complete right here any
high school credits he might
lack. Only then will the non
graduate be eligible for college
training benefits of the GI bill
of rights.
Capt. Harry C. Mahan and
Lt. J. Ott Schulte, who have
been especially trained for edu
cational services duty, are in
charge of the 8-month-old pro
gram at the Barracks.
Sutherlin Brothers
Hurt In Explosion
ROSEBURG, Ore., June 28
(JP) Buster Stutzman. 6, and
his brother, Billy, 4, sons of Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Stutzman, Suther
lin, are in Mercy hospital, here
today, following Injuries su;
fered last night In the explos
ion of a dynamite cap with
which they were playing. Bus
ter, physicians report, may lose
the sight of one eye. Billy suf
fered a mangled hand, but am
putation, it is believed, can be
avoided.
Where the boys found the
cap has not been learned. They
took it to bed with them, to
gether with some toys, and are
thought to have struck the cap
with a toy truck.
A large hole was blown com
pletely through the mattress of
the bed. N -
IKIIi,M a li
Directed by
Robert limey
rhoiMraDlud in CTMICOLOl
I Matinee Daily Open 1:30-6:45 Phone 4567
I THURS. - FRI. - SAT. I
I June 282930 I
Guns Roared difSh fiv&fh
Amid Thundering ZifH ff 3&aJ
(Added COLOR CARTOON
Program SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
Spice LATEST NEWS
JAP AIRCRAFT
BASHED
BY SUPERFDRTS
(Continued From Pago Ono)
Kyushu, 1.3 squaro miles, or 20
per cent of the built up area, and
Omuta, on Honshu, ,11 square
mile.
Three other targets wero hit
on the June 22 daylight demoli
tion mid, but acriul photography
assessment of the damage nas
not been completed.
The Kasumlguurn seaplane
base northeast of Tokyo-was 33
per cent destroyed Juno 10,
General Lomay reported.
LAWRENCE SLATER
WE FOR VISIT
After traveling 17,000 In the
last 10 days, Maj. Lawrence
Slater arrived hero Wednesday
for a visit with friends in his
home town.. In civilian life a
Klamath Falls goncral Insurance
man, Maj. Slater is now with
the air transport command and
has spent the last two years in
India.
He will bo here for a few days
and then will go east to take
over new duties with ATC In
Florida. His assignment is in
the Caribbean area, and he may
do considerable traveling in
Central America and South
America.
The trip home from India took
Maj. Slater on a iinai part oi a
iournev around the. world. He
went to India by the Pacific,
and returned by the Atlantic
crossing. His trip home wus en
tirely by plane.
Addressing me Ktwanis club,
Maj. Slater told of the work
done by the men who "fly the
hump" from India to China, and
said their work, while not spec
tacular, will count as a major
factor in the final victory.
Chinese Capture
Rail Station
CHliNuKING, June 2d
The Chinese high command an
nounced today that Chinese
forces assaulting Liuchow had
captured a railway station in
the western suburbs of that
strategic Kwangsi province city
and a part of the airfield to the
south.
Field dispatches earlier had
reported that the Chinese col
umn on the west, paced by low
flying American fighter-bombers,
was battling toward a junc
tion with other forces battering
at Lluchow's south railway sta
tion. !
The fighting was described as
heavy. .
HELPING HAND
SEATTLE, June 28 P( Traf-1
fie siena nrintpd in Riijuinn have I
appeared beneath English ' lan
guage signs on the ramps lead
ing to a viaduct near Harbor is
land. City Traffic Engineer J. W. A.
Bollong explained sailors off
Russian ships have been having
trouble with 'American traffic.
i ,
I
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued from Pugo Ono)
that even tho biggest burrvl can
run empty In tlnia If only tho
bunglioiu li large onuugh,
AT any ruto, the Jup com
manrlors are fighting their
war with reckless ulnregurd of
human Ufa. We are going to tho
opposite extreme, saving every
American Ufa wo possibly can.
Tho figures so fur indicate
rather plainly that ovon leaving
humanity and deconry out of
consideration our way is tho
WAY TO WIN A WAR,
TN the fighting around Oklnawu,
Jap suicide planes sank 33 of
our ships (destroyers or smaller)
and damaged 80 of all sizes. Wo
hud a total of 1400 ships en
gaged. Lumping tho sunk and
the damaged (which aro being
repaired) together, tho losses In
flicted by tho kamikazes amount
to only 6.4 per cunt of our ships.
In- tho Okinawa fighting, the
Japs lost 4000 planes kami
kazes and others.
Again the figures aro against
tncni.
TN tho north Pacific, ono of our
task forces gets Into the Sea
of Okhotsk and wrecks n Jup
supply convoy or live vessels.
. it our navy can inns roam
I around In the Sea of Okhotsk
i we can pour supplies Into SI
BERIA.
I
THE Japs say Ballkpapan, on
. Borneo, has been virtually
destroyed by a 20-day air bonv
hni-Hmpnt. with nnr jiiirfnee war-
I rhlps bombarding the town every
third ioy. ine Australians are
nreac'lng out north and south
rom Brunei bay and have the
big Seria and Mirl oil flc'ds com
pletely m th-ir "'-"ssion.
THE Jap radio Is burbling
about milcldo orconrullnns to
defend the homeland against In
vasion by us. Ono Domel cor
respondent Just back from a tour
ot "jnociai aiiacK umciau;
bases nil over Jannn flaws his
wings and crows: "I even HOPE
for an early lnndlmt of enemy
forces on our mainland Just to
SENSE TH: THRILL when we
strlko a deadly blow . to the
enmv."
(We mleht remind him of the
fob'ed irlhmnn who sensed the
thr'U o ruhbln" Hie bull's nose
In tho dirt. b"t "n't do so well
WP.n ),q c'l-nbed ho co-'al fence
and tried It on the bull).
Rules Committee
Holds FEPC Bill
WASHINGTON, June 28 m
Tho house rules committee to
day blocked off house notion on
any new funds for FEPC, while
a senate talkathon prevented
consideration of a proposed
FEPC appropriation In that
chamber.
Tho. combined actions pres
aged demise for the fair em
ployment practico commlttco by
the end of the week.
Crews Work to Open
Eagle Canyon Roads
BAKER, June 28 IP) Forest
service crews worked today to
open roads in Eagle canyon, laid
completely bare in some areas
by a gigantic storm last week.
Uprooted trees completely
blocked roads 41 trunks lying
in one half-mllo stretch. Every
tree in some tracts had been up
rooted? and In other orcas ever
greens were snapped off 10 or
20 feet above tho ground.
Opens Bi48 Week Days
DOUBLE FEATURE
THURS" - FRI.
It'a Navy Day! The
Fleet i in ,
the girls
are out . .
EOtTRHOIlSOf
SALT LAKE CITY, June 28
(IP) Authorities obtained Intact
ono of the balloons Jnpun has
been sending over North Amer
ica thanks to tho tueuclly of u
western sheriff.
Tho Suit Lake Dasarot Nows
told tho story, omitting for se
curity reasons tho niiina of the
officer, location of the county of
which ho was sheriff and (late
of tho Incident. Ilia paper said
his story was assed by tho of
fice of censorship.
Informed that a balloon had
lodged against a hillside, the
sheriff drovo to the spot, the
News suld, Just as the big bag
started to ascend,
The officer blurted after It In
his cur, which mired In a mud
hole, then continued tho chase
on foot.
"I run for more than two
miles, up and down hills before
I finally grabbed hold o It when
It was forced to tho ground by
the sheriff suld.
But tho balloon started to
rise again.
"I fought that darned thing
for 55 minutes." tho officer ro
tated, "before It dropped to the
f! round and I succeeded In tying
t to a choke cherry bush."
Aussies Drive
Toward Pass
SAN FRANCISCO, Juno 28
(I') A full-scale A list ml lun
drive to break through the
Mount Hhluiirnniiii key pass of
the Prince Alexander mountains
In tho Wewnk area of Now Guin
ea was announced by Mel
bourne radio today In a broad
cast recorded by tho American
Broadcasting company.
Tho pass leads to open coun
try In northern New Guinea.
The broadcast said the Japanese
positions on Mount Shlburnngu,
overlooking tho pass, had been
outflanked,
Wewak was captured by. the
Australians last May 14 after an
amphibious landing nearby and
tho drive inland was started.
Marines To Present
Demonstration
Three men from the Marine
Barracks will present a demon
stration In unarmed defense at
tonight's meeting of the Elks
lodge. i
Sgt. Russell Cleveland will
be In charge of the demonstra
tion. Ono of the men was with
the Commandos In Enuland. The
affair has been arranged by
Newton Nelson,
Big Stage and Screeit Show
Starts TONIGHT
IT
FREE PARKING
TUIIDC CDI CAT
I nWIVd. - ril. - 28-2S-30
FEATURED
IN
SCREEN
OLD BARN
DANCE"
.1 -.
BLUE I Oi I.V.r.
MONTANA Jj '
SKI ES - . 1
'SCATTERBRAIN If f i V fKM
PW7 featuring
Western Movie
Favorites
Acta Lee
KLLBNl
STAR V
nun (tinea
' . ' 1 M M .
wfcyu!i' -mwmstiwt fiiTrnr iiii"ttw
SPINE CHILLING i X I
hItIIIIIIIII
To Eugene Mr. end Mrs, Le,
roy Krdinann and family wll
leave Klumutli Falls about Aug.
mt 1 to muke their homo In Eu
gene, Erdmiinn, formerly hlgb
school vocational dlroctor here,
will take over new duties hi
head of the vocational school la
the Willamette valley city.
Here PFC Donald It. Crw
ford, from Lai Vegas. Nov,, lj
hero until Monday, July if.
Home SSgt. Rodney D. Bon
lis Is hore from overseas and
will be at homo for 05 more
days.
OF
(Continued from Page Ono)
that tho burden of proof lies
with the stnta and that the.
slate must provo Its cusa be-
yond a reasonulilo doubt. Ho
said that tho statu must prove
that the crime of rape was com
mitted by force and against the
consent of tho prosecuting wit
ness. Judgo Vandenberg also told
the Jury that (ho resistance
must bo honest, actual, Mid
bona-fldo.
Seized Property
To Be Held
WASHINGTON, June 28 (IP)
German and Jupanese property
seized by this country at ths
outbreak of tho war will not be
returned to the owners, high
government agencies huve
agreed.
Allen Properly Custodian
James E. Murkhnm told tho sen.
nto sub-commlltee studying axis
war potential In a statement
yesterday that his office "will
recommend that tho property In
tho United States which hat
been seized from nationals ol
Germany and Japan should noi
be returned to them. , . , It li
the joint opinion ot the treasury
department and. the office ol
alien property custodian. , , .
approved by tho state depart
mcnt."
TRACTOR SUPPLY BETTER
CORVALLIS. June 28 (J1
Oregon's third quartor alloca
tion ot crawler tractors Is 81
machines, the largest numbei
since rationing began, the AAA
announced today.
PHONE 8484
JUNE
RPLLINO
HOME
to
TEXAS
OVER THE
PRAIRIE"
FIGHTING "
EN
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ML
A
Ml I IN TECKNICOLORI
All 'Iff BOWMAN
m DARRO
r. chant wntuM tp CiJ
II, DAVID DUMND J. W
B S MNMfM MtMt fiFk
COMING SUNDAY
HOBUZXLL
TOM CONWAY
.1