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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1945)
EIGHT HERALD AMD HEWS Mo-da.. Jul. 16. 1945 German Bank Yields Rings, Fillings, Other Nazi Loot " Br GEORGE TTJCXEH , eases held gold and silver fiiV FRANKFURT. Germany. Julys ings from the teeth of concentra 18 ijF) The pillaged wealth option camp victims, nazi occupied Europe, taken j Current experts from the from the teeth of murdered Jews ' United States treasury and the and the coffers of -seized govern-iBank of England were identify, meats alike, was piied celling in and making an inventory of high todsv in the Reichsmarte the nan ioot. bank of Frankfurt. "An accurate estimate of the In addition to gold and stiver total value can never be made, there were hogsheads of pearls, ; said Col. Bernard Bernstein. d rubies and sapphires. Wooden rector of the finance division of the U. S. group control council. Ke said the collection incluaed ON LEAVE J. R. Larimer, RT 1 'c. Is now home on leave after seeing ac- tion in the Solomons; New ! Guinea, and the Philippines. Larimer is the son of Mr. and WAGNER US US PLAGE IN WORLD DANK s Flashes of VPy A Sign m a grocery store window reards; "Ooing uin oi sexs , Vnul We Meat Again." 53 pa rate deposits hiaden by the naxss and unearthed by U. S. troops durine the final days of m m I "le war. isc? .v. . I f A sold bullion discovered by the W U. S. third armv in the Merkers a.t mmes and special hidden " """"" 1 1 I. UA:-AU U;mle Q.Q --rJfjM!?1-- aniia tion 'which were buried Pm-BLKGh Juif la VrV- chickea coops oa a Ger Safe cracsers broke into the , Shadyside theaae and robbed cache thouwdt of the strongbox of S32o. Tr.e pic-( , tred from the tore overused i. on tu ; was: "Having Wonderful Crime, tsin CeTtar Greece. Po- ; RtJT n-frrj,, s land and other occupied coun- ,-v.i. n-vt-v ro-A J!v IS tries were strung on ropes like ew riaven u silver and gold wrist watches, j cigarette cases, wedding rings. jbraceiets and jeweiry of every . ; r a -7 a toescncaoQ, oerr-siei- .e. LAIIAR, Colo- July 16 t?--i 'Tn-s was taken from nan con Thanks to a sulky rooster who I cectration ; camp victims crafted under house to bef The bulhon was stacked like tone, the bacon shortage has cordwocd and one laree room been solved, temporarily for the held nothing but securities from Beavers family. ianosi every country in the When the brooding bird disap-! world. The loot includes mi! peared under her porch yester- lions of Russian rubles and day. Mrs. A. I Beavers dis-i $34,000,000 m L. S. gold coins. patched her grandson to get it ' anting it back to the chicken; Kamikaze Can't Stop - a few minutes later, the ty American Romance emerged with the rooster and j ' a tin bo- containing four (count ; SEATTLE, July 16 P A 'em, four!) slabs of bacon. Mr. romance a Japanese kamikaze Beavers suddenly remembered attack couldn't kill will be ful that he had bought the meat il!ed v,ere Wednesday, when back in 1917 and stored it under ; ETelyn Kuhn 0f San Jose, Calif., the house. Not knowing that the .m marrv Warren C. Holcombe, container was ermecsJIy;dioma-1Ci sealed. Beavers long ago had, Holcombe was terribly burned given the bacon up as spoiled !whe.a japanese suicide plane Today it was in no danger of icI3shei into his destroyer, kill spoihng on the Beavers family . , b t tw0 men ndi0 breakfast table. shack. Holcombe wrote Miss Kuhn 'Wouldn't Have Missed It,' Shangri-La Survivor Says VANCOUVER, Wash., July 18 I tweet potato patch, life was aim-! wv "ttouldn t have missed it, pier. but wouldn't have asked for it," j Until then, the two men and declared T S Kenneth Decker. I the woman lived on "charms," the Kelso. Wash., member of . the candy nutrition food in life New Guinea 'Shangri-La' survi- rafts salvaged from the wrecked J ice, paid an official visit Satur vors, who is now at Barnes Gen. j plane. Later they swapped i day to the Lava Beds national crsl hospital. army food for vegetables, curios f monument. "We've told all the stories we; and trinkets from the natives, i A road Improvement project could, and then we tell them all "Five shells was worth one which will include grading and over again," he admitted when P'K. one shell would buy a bow I drainage of all roads in the mom asked about his 47-day stay with and arrow," he remembered. umcnt was scheduled, starting dark-skinned natives of the rug-! Decker credited Filipino mcd-time depending on arrival of Red mountain country where he ic with giving him as good screws from other park. It was ana rwo companions, one a w ac, ; ne expecis at j announced .Monday oy uoil l in- TULELAKE O. A. Tomlln son. San Francisco, regional di rector of the national parK erv- i I. Li,- J WASHINGTON. July 16 t Chairman Wagiu-r D-N. Y.) of the senate banking committee called today for United States membership in a world fund ana pans wmcn ne saia ouia;wpre the su-,.iV)Jrj 0( , i Barnes hospital. When the na-ier. custodian. f, - mar,";l? uv ! amy plane crash. " learned medicine men' Fire trails were Improved pendable currency values. The others, Lt. John S. McCol- i wt hr. hey brought their, during the twoly fire school Wagner submitted to the sen-,nd Wac Cp, Margaret i children f o r bandaging of ! by fire guard.. Charles Shlnn. ate tne moneiarv proposals : n--(; ,r.t wounds, he added. iMniinrH i. i crash landing. He was the only . The Kelso sergeant said being ! chin butle. f'rnl Schepman, " one of the trio injured, suffering 5 m " ? 'he South Pacific's S North Bend, is temporary ran- burns and an arm'injurv. most isolated regions didn't ex-Uer, and the fire guard incluiie "Our firs'inteirat was to sUV cu mm KP duty. j Eugene Stluka. Gaysmlll, Wis., alive, our next, to reach civlliia-L "Corporal Hastings couldn't , and Jack Best. Don Grove and tion." Decker related. After a " iouna sergeant ueck-1 Earl Milligan, all of Camp Tulc- Vota To Decldo Call For Bids SI'OKANE, July IB (;T) If lauduwncrs volo fiivonibly In lli July 21 elecllon nil contract re payment, tho U, 8. buretiu of rec liiinnlion will call for bid) for iiianufactura of tho world lurgest pumps for tho Columbia Damn Irrigation district, Charlri E. Cone of Spokane, research a sistnnt for Out WnshliiKliin Stula Columbia Iluslti I'mnmlsalun, id ycstcrdiiy. Any one of the 13 puinplnij units ultimately to bo Insliillrd according lo the pinna would lifl capable of pumping mioiigli water for all domestic require ments of New York City, Cona said. FR ASXT SPEAKING releasing her from her engage- Co3- Sinn-ent p1.ri tMtaK Country Supermtenent of . lMsed. Sri-nftfr "I'm so proud of him," she fLef a m il'said Saturdav when she arrived n f fl P' r-; bere to vit Holcombe at the woman with 18 years expen- v-..-,. -.1 vmr c ence who apparently believes in -Naval ,ho?Pual af,er mree year s . I separation. explication read in part LSL1. "I am an unattractive loVking ! P123??- afHtrJS person 54 years old. Only once . rceL iTTI wis I not asked to come back to ho e; fj SZM a school. That was because aho?enoim at a f"end " man teacher was needed to play j a! Lae Sawyer, af ter which the in the local dance orchestra: Uj rtSTn.,,to CaMornia , ... I and Holcombe' will go back to PtniSE PHODD ithe hospital. BLOOMtXGTON. El, Julv 16 s ' (iPV Roe R. Wirick. night police ; LoqOerS Get Answer captam, wishes women eitneri f . would carry smaller biidbass;On Meat Point Query or stay out of jail. His morning j reoort after a busy night con-f PORTLAND, July 16 VP) tained the following comolaint ; Oregon loggers had" the answer T am having a great deal of : today to question about how trouble trying to find a place to : long they are expected to go lock up the belongings of the j without meat, yet stay on the job prisoners. These overnight, bar-1 iji the big woods rack bag type of purses that the! Douglas Boyie, national OPA women carry take up more room ' official, told loggers they al than the cash drawer- will hold.' ready get four times "the j standard number of food ration . .- BUZ COLLECTOR f points and any complaints could OGLESBY. Til , July 16 1 -P Ibe given company hash-house Mrs. Lewis Eberier has three ! spervisors. small sons and when they collect Boyle had no answer to how toads, frogs, birds, butterflies restaurants could keep emoloyes and fireflies she doesn't get very i if they were open only four days excised. j a week. Boyle" earlier had urged But now 10-year-old Raloh is ' cafes to stay open and feed the collecting bumblebee? and has i workin? public "even though it ii e jars ran aj n roe nouse. : is spagnetu. one s moving wim caution. Aleutian Circuit Contacts Seattle AX ALTUTTANS BASE, July 16 i&i The lonely Aleutians were put in direct voice contact with the states yesterday with the establishment of a radio telephone circuit from this base. Tbe circuit prnnari! y is to provide servicemen with a ch-nce to talk to their fam ilies. They may be connected with Seattle for a five-minute conversation at a cost of $230 plus 25 cents federal tax. For points beyond Seattle domestic rates will prevail. Lighter Fluid Kills Philadelphia Baby PHILADELPHIA, July 16 tPV Carmen Pe-ongolo visited witn a friend in the living room while his 17-nsonth-old son. An-: tfeony, played on the kitchi n Anthony reached up on a win fdow sill, took down a bottle of ( lighter fluid. u screwed the cap i and drank the contents. An hour i later the baby died in a hospital. ' "! II I ll - I I. i Mrs. EL L. Clayton of 2529 i White! While in the Pacific, he , serv ed with a motor torpedo squadron. ; Following his leave. Larimer will report to Treasure Island. OAK LEAF CLUSTER T Sgt. Worth P. Wells, 332 North- 10th street, Klamath Falls, aerial engineer, has been awarded an Oak Leaf Cluster to the D.F.C-, it was announced by Brig. Gen. William H. Tur ner, commanding general of the India-China division, air trans port command. The award was made upon completion of 600 hours of op erational flight in transport air craft over the dangerous and difficult India-China air routes, where enemy interception and attack was probable and ex pected. The air trail over the Hump, famed route through the tow ering peaks of the Himalaya mountains, blazed by the air transport command, is recog nized by airmen as the world's toughest. Today the Hump route is the only lifestream of vital military supplies for the allied forces fighting the Japanese in China. The citation accompanying the award adds; "Flying at night as well as by day, at high altitudes over impassable, mountainous terrain through areas characterized by extremely treacherous weather conditions necessitating long periods of operation on instru ments ... requiring courageous and superior performance of his duties to overcome, he accom plished his mission with distinc tion ..." The award was made for the period of service 2 December 1943 to 28 March 1943. PILOT AWARDED MEDAL FO Andrew A. Silani, pilot, of 1019 Jefferson. Klamath Falls, has been awarded an Air Medal, it was announced by j Brig. Gen. William H. Tunner. ! commanding general of the ! India-China division, air trans j port command. i The award was made upon ; completion of 150 hours of op i erational flight in transport air f craft over the dangerous and I difficult Ir-Ua-Cnina air routes. : where enemy interception and i attack was probable and expect I ed. The award was made for the period of service January 9, 1945 to March 1, 1945. iwmed collectively "Bretton Woods" after the town in New Hampshire where they were torn one year ago in a world conference. There the United Nations agreed on a plan for an "inter national monetary fund and in ternational bank for reconstruc tion and development." Mem bers would be depositors, bor rowers, and stockholders. In a long prepared speech sking approval of legislation authorizing American partner ship, Wagner said near the out set: J "The question before us is I whether by default we will al ! low the wo rid to repeat the j tragic blunders of the 1920 s i and 1930 s. Hani' Norland Flru Insurance. Phone 6060. search plane located the trio's camp in the middle of a native PLAYS AT MY; er assigned regularly." he said. He praised the pretty New York state Wac. "She was small, but she had a lot of grit. Not many girls In the army could do as well as she did." Decker's lees are still Kan. daged. and he doesn't know wnen he II get out. But lake. Lakeview Firemen To Receive Pay LAKEVIEW The cltv fathers he's i recently passed a resolution. been home to see his parents and I which is the practice of a num. to deliver some souvenirs. 'Ousley Chape! Scene Funeral serv- Joininff the n rade of name bands to the Klamath Falls ar- Of Funeral Services TKi. win n x-r--- ' ct jimmy iunceiora. Jimmy,; i ivrvirw i IOU Wti Villi J w V1V WiJl-V" t. . . ' 1 M Jtunirv to initiate constructive I , i ices were held Thursday after- (Steps' to outlaw competitive cur-"most popular colored orchestras. noon Ousley chapel for Rob--T,. .,-,!i .ninih.r.!Comes to the armory, Wedncs- -rt Hcnr- iRmi Vr. ., nomlc warfare devices, to sub-jdaJ'' Ju-" -5- died Monday morning, stitute cooperation for unila-1 In addition to his regular rec-; The deceased was bom Octo teral action in dealing with in-lords for Decca. Jimmy Lunce- ber 4. 1874. at Kenlon. Hardin tematioaal problems, ord a-d bis great band have county, Ohio, and 17 of his 70 -imfin Mna .(.rii-iil. made several recordings for the ; years had been SDent in Lake hire and labor have never' - s- war oepartmeni special : county. jwtiuam, B. Uasser, 12. was sought temporary advantage ' service division. These records- Survivors Include one sister, i burned severely when a tank of inree , uuIIi1 cmirti tw threw cold water in the flames. The Fraternal Order nf ', jTrrr-rr- Eagles was in charee of the Vi.i. i ors and marines. 1 rial and interment was in Sun- ' Jimmie has also appeared on ' ' Park cemetery. " special GI Jive army programs ber of other towns throughout the state having a population of from 1000 to 2500. compensating their volunteer firemen for the hours they spend on fires and practice meetings. Rate of pay is $1 per hour for the first hour or fraction there of: 75 cents for each additional hour or fraction; 50 cents for at tendance at the regular monthly drill meetings. PORTLAND BOY BURNED PORTLAND. July 16 W ; sougnr temporary, a-va-ui&e , ,, " ' . , , through trickery and manipula- ( ad Pcy tor the boys Mrs. Etta Kramer, and tion. AU t-ey want is 7airjvera. and are sent to the brothers all of Michigan. ; ... .u 5 xixnunz ironts wiific uir cmrr- ZZZ n"in" Itain millions of our soldiers, sail- world of orderly markets and dependable currency values." Six-Pound Boy Born To Loretta Young HOLLYWOOD, July 16 CP! A son was born yesterday to Actress Loretta Young, wife of Col. Thomas H. A. Lewis, com manding officer of the armed forces radio service. that are shortwaved all over the i puf n ; front!" ' "-- kw;, in! Hangs Himself world to the boys in the lines. Jimmy has received turn, thousands of letters from our soldiers all over the world.' SAN FRANCISCO, July 18 thanking him for adding hours f.p Humiliated because he had of pleasure to their lives when,, of ring1.orm and they need it roost. wiJ ostricized by his playmates. : eight-year-old David S t o 1 1 1 Coos Bay Man Grows l"."1 i-"-.?-"" ?s-ted -. , i - j. Aire- wj uwj. iiiiK K . ine six-pouna Doy was n-mea, K0aoes UnderarOUnd '""n belt was found in a r-eier ewis. ne coupie nasi - j clothes closet. nouier son. wnnstopner raui, born last August 1, and an adopted daughter, Judy, 9. Falls From Catwalk To Drown In Lake COOS BAY. July 16 -P Discovery of a possible way to grow potatoes underground without foliage may allow him to plant corn and tomatoes on top. K. E. Marcy said today. Early in June he planted four rows of potatoes, but no shoots SANDY. July 16 (.Pi James came up. Marcy. starting to rc Sanford Southerland, 62, drown-! plant, found the seed potatoes cd in Roslyn lake north of here still in the earth with edible Saturday after falling from a ' size spuds growing from the catwalk between a dredge and ; eyes. the hydro - eleCnc reservoir ! He attributed the miracle to I shoreline. j storing the seed potatoes in a Sandy firemen tried vainly to s copper boiler last fall. This, revive him with an inhalator. J Marcy said, may have kept them The lake is owned by the Port-tfrom sprouting without injuring 1 land General Electric company, the mother tuber. '. Southerland was employed as an oiler on the dredge. ABOUT LONELINESS ; There are not many words in our language so charged and sur-charged with self-pity as mat worn ioe- RUSSIAN Sand 299 Weasel 318 COATS Tax Inc. Uness." YeO iir-' a loneliness h a s f Ta3 its advnta- i 1 Isn't our first j I " " ' duty to soeietv f ri J s. 1 the dutT of be ing somebody ft-iSrV that is. of being C 1 f - St-1' - ViUKi f. A how can you develop an in dividuality un less you can have, at times. toe blessing of loneliness? l Lrowas, coruusion, r.o these are not surroundings for soul-growth. We need time to think, time to dream, time to picture, in imagination, the fise things we are going to do. Of course, we don't get ail of those things done. But you have to think them first before you can get anything done. I believe, if we are capable of being fascinated by some constructive vis ion or resolve, we'll never suffer any very des perate loneliness. And the truth is that anyone who is possessed by such a spiritual fLame is magnetic enough to attract the people and the things he needs to carry out whit he has dreamed. , "Memory Garden is for your Comfort and Pleasure." CUMMINGS Far Shop 11&7JSJ , The Famous Bone-Dry Shoes In Oil Tan 8-Inch Tops with rubber tap soles and heels Are the Best In Town Buy -Sine 1J1I LDREW'S MANSTOSI 733 Main St Agents for Bos Dry Shoes for 26 Years. J i.L.""-i' V"'-. -J - s&j .V"" ITT to ! Ail-Wool Blue Serge PANTS $15.73 RUDY'S (00 Mala Ward's Tractor TOE SAG..: Do you .need Tractor Tires? If so SEE Mr. Perry of the Basement Store Tire Department Next Mondar Mr. Whitlock of the Earl Whitlock Funeral Home will comment on "Un counted Assets." gS2i- . 'gj Dick B. Miller Co. j 7th and Kl azxu Phon 4103 L (Ia 1 sYC fim M'mte m bk rci r Cnnr-T- mm) KeBogg's Corn Flakes bring you nearly all the protective food ele ments of the whole grain declared essential to human nutrition. ?6 WM 2 pkjs. 39c nj-D SANITARY NAPKINS Pacific ZwA Paper MHIt tilling, w -fcfcmii M-Momr rtn l of M-D Toilet Tissue SC-1 MONTOOMIRY WARD Canning Supplies Malte food-ration points go further . . . make those "outdoor season" fresh fruits and vegetables last the whole year round, by doing your own canning! And, make your "can ning dollars" go further by buying all supplies at Wards! l-Pl. Mason Jars, Dozen 69 Metal Widemouth Jar Lids. 1-Qt. Mason Jars, Doien 79 Std. Metal Jar Caps, Doien .10 Sfd. Metal Jar Lids, Doitn .25 Mital Widemouth Jar Caps, Doien ... .35 Doien 19 Std. ' Shoulder Jar Rubber, Doien .........; 05 Top-Seel Jar Rubber, Dozen .25 IVIontgomery Ward t i