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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1945)
TWO HERALD AND MEWS I SURRENDER TO i BE SIGNED ON US BATTLESHIP (Continued From Pane One) cupation zone, and to surrender all ships and submarines at sea to allied ports. Admirals Nimitz and Sir Bruce Fraser, whose combined U. S. and British Pacific fleets helped shorten the war with their repeated unrelenting bomb ing and bombarding of the Japa nese homeland from July 10 un til the August 14 truce, will sign the surrender document for the United Slates and for the Unit ed Kingdom. H is presumed that the Missouri, named for President Truman's home state, will be Nimitz' flagship. Treaty Signers Lt. Gen. Kuzma Nikolaevech Derevyanko will sign for Russia and Gen. Hsu Yung-Chang for China, the other members of the Big Four. ' . . Signing for other allies will be Gen. Sir Thomas Blarney for Australia; Lt. Gen. L. H. Van Oyen for the Netherlands East Indies, and lien. Jacques le Clerk for France, Canada and New Zealand yet are to name their representatives. Imperial headquarters . sgain today radioed to MacArthur that Japanese were encountering se rious difficulties in China due; to '"the activities of irregular forces, bandits and disturb ances of mobs." It was a simi lar report four dags ago. Mac Arthur replied that he had for warded the complaint to umna. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) ; make sure it wasn't seeing things i that weren't there and then, pos sibly, to send in a hurry call for the high sheriff . and - all his assistants for it was rug-cutting of the ruggedesi sort. But a good time was certainly had by all. XTIGHT falls, and the nearly a " dozen 8th Air Force and RAF. bands that have been furnishing the music fall silent and the fireworks display begins. The fireworks : are over-age Royal Navy signal rockets and Roman candles and illuminating flares. , The thought In. every English mind is the same: "Only a few months ago, we wouldn't have JJAKh-U to do this, for illumina tion on such a stele would have been an engraved invitation to roaming German bombers to sweep in and loose their deadly cargoes. V-E Day brought a great cele bration Here. NOT because the English felt that Germany's de- leat Drougnt the end of the war for them, for they know it didn't. They are as fully aware as we that Japan remains to be beaten before peace can arrive. But we must remember that for nearly six years this part of England was practically on the firing line. It DOES bring a great thrill of relief whenever . they ; are" re minded that the bombs and the rockets and the buzz-bombs are through falling.' t. 'FHE English hereabouts never T. tire of talking about the AAnerican GIs. They are grate ful to them, of course. We on the home front in America sim pljr can't realize the grimness of the situation when, our first ad vance air units began to arrive. It (may have been gratitude and relief in 1942, but" it has "deep ened and ripened. It is now genuine affection; -. y These boys of ours : have worked their, way into English. nearis. iou can t lan to believe that after listening to all the talk. - - Q'UR youngsters were pretty 1 well indoctrinated when they arrived. They had been told at briefings innumerable just what they must do and what they must not do In order to avoid offending the English people or hutting their feelings or making things difficult for them at least to avoid rubbing their fur the wrong way. They were loaded down with booklets,' written by our best psycholog ists and public experts. They must have been thor oughly bluffed by all this pro grim, for the English laugh and sa r they were surely hard to get nent to. But they soon learned th it English people WANTED to do, things for them, WANTED them In their homes, LIKED to have them around. . " After that it was 'duck soup! THe GIs needed no further "Drieiing" or lecturing or in dobtrinntion. They took all this business of international good will into their own extrovert hahds, and the English loved it. Ilasslfied Ads Bring Results RADIO REPAIR ' . ' . . 'By Expert Technicians - '( . GOOD STOCK OF AVAILABLE TUBES-PARTS-AERIALS .. For All Makes ol Radios ZEMAN'S We buy, sell and trade radios Quick, Guaranteed Service 116 N. 9h Phone 7522 Across From Montgomery Ward on North 9th ThuntUy. Aug. 23. 1945 I ! a).iiam JUIIWMyV'lliay m ' Lt. Col. Paul W. Tibbiti Jr., first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, strategic air force headquarters. Rear Adm. William R. Purnell, Gen. Carl Spaati. and Ma. Gen. of 20th air force. Navy radio-telephoto from Guam. QUISLE HELD FOR MURDER QE NORWAY JEWS (Continued From Page One) - wegian general staff and organ ize a red guard. The witness said the offer was made in a dis cussion with a communist party editor. Denies Tortures Quisling, pale and agitated, in sisted he never had heard of the German gas chambers, -.and alsoi denied a state accusation that he had embezzled ' government funds. Testifyine on the fourth dav of his trial on charges of high treason, quisling told the court that by payments to the Ger mans he was able to keep 260,- uuu.uuu Kronor irom getting in to their hands. (The krone was valued at 45 cents before the war.) A salary of 1,000,000 for himself and several millions for 40 guards; at his estate,- he said, should be considered lust n sum to cover expenses in his duties as leaden ol the state.:. .. 'War Time' Repeal Badgers Congress WASHINGTON, Aug; 23 (IP) There were signs on Cafpitol Hill today that congress may be asked to act promptly upon re convening to repeal "war time" and turn the nation's clocks back one hour to pre-war standard time. Rep. Howell (R-Ill.), member of the house interstate commerce committee, said" he would call for immediate committee action on one of several pending re pealer bills as soon as congress reconvenes September 5. "Under the war time," he said, "children must go to school in the dark, and farmers must do their early . morning chores bv lantern light. Now that the war is over, the need for war time has passed, and we should re turn to standard time immedi ately. SURGEON DIES BALTIMORE, Aug.- 23 (IP) Dr. Hugh H. Young, internation ally known surgeon and urolo gist who was among several famous Mexical men cnnnptpH with the growth and develnn- ment of the Johns Hopkins hos- piuu, uiea toaay. We write the kind of Insur ance we need not apologise for after the accident or fire. Hans Norland Insurance Agency. 118 N. 7th St. Phone 6060. PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO rAIW - NO HOSPITALIZATION Na Lett af Tim' Permanent BttnlUl'- DR. E. M. MARSHA Cblrapractle' Pbrilclan Ne. 71b Rioalre Theatre SMa Feeae KM ... NOW AVAILABLE (To All Uatrt) Adding Machines Calculators New Royal Typewriter ' DESKS CHAIRS FILES Stf-Tlc sn All Machine! PIONEER PRINTING AND STATIONERY CO. 122-124 S. 9th, Klamath Falls "Hard To Believe What We Miami, Fla., (standing), pilot of tells of his experience at a Guam. Seated (left to right) are Truman To Ask Amendment To . Security Clause .WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (IP) President Truman told reporters today that he will recommend amendatory, legislation, if it is found to be needed, to continue the selective service job secur ity clause , for returning veter ans. He said he was not aware of the legAl technicalities of that section of the draft act insuring veterans their 1 peacetime jobs only until, the end of the war, but emphasized he intended to see that such insurance is con tinued. . . BE COrJDUCTED HERE (Continued From Page One) feasible for this -district, and pro cedure lor obtaining a suitable building, in that case. . Directors of - the Klamath county YMCA were incorbbrated last December, with the object of establishing a youth . center lor, both boys - and girls, for social and recreational purposes; to help combat juvenile de linquency. The proposed center would not in any manner con fact with school activities in these lines but rather supplement mem, is-eni stated. The meeting held in the cham ber of commerce rooms, pre ceded by a luncheon at the Pel ican grill yesterday noon, was well attended. Directors of the corporation are besides the pres ident, A. M. collier, John band meier, G. C. Blohm, Troy Cook. Classified Ads Bring Results, Hat. OaUr Oaiu lM t.it fbona un tmmw Starts TODAY liMli HELMUT DANTINE JEAN SUUIVAH PHILIP D0RN RENE MANNING ALAN U1II ill V1 I mmmmmmm,mtMlM.-mmmLlmmmm my I FOR YOUR ADDED ENJOYMENT MARCH OF TIME Saw' B-29 Superfort which dropped preit conference at U. S. army Brig. Gen. Thomas t. rarrell. Curtis . Lemay, chle! ot stail (Continued From Page One) were among the 1,000,000 Japa nese whose surrender is called for in preliminary negotiations with the Chinese field comman der. Jap Sympathy Tokyo's sympathy went out to 10,000,000 purported victims of 'American incendiary, explo sive and atom bombs. The gov ernment asked permission to send relief expeditions to sick and dying garrisons on by passed islands. In return it promised aid to 32,000 allied prisoners in Nippon and said they would be started toward embarkation ports Friday. Tokyo Urges Peace Tokyo told 1,200,000 Nippon ese in Korea and Formosa to stay where they are and "ear nestly worn lor peace. Japa nese also expressed concern about possible civil war in tur bulent unma, scene oi tne greatest confusion in surrender plans. Forest Camp Crew, . Boys To Return. Home Boys who have been working In the Penny . Springs, A Kings Cabin, and Ft. Klamath forest camps this summer will start to return to Klamath Falls this weekend because of the. approach of the school year, according to Klamath Forest Protective as sociation. Boys have .been- spread out over the county during the sum mer on fire patrol and in the forest campsr but the three camps have been centers for the crews. ..... Crews from these camps have been sent but on forest and brush fires all during the summer. BRITISH PLAN OCCUPATION OF HONG KONG (Continued From Pago One) ministers, now set for Septem ber 10. The British foreign office commentator snld no ngiTemont had been rcnohod for the Chi nese to occupy Hong Kong. Re- filylng to n question, he ncknow edged that the seaport was in the Chinese zone of occupation and said "wo should bo very happy to have the Chinese asso ciated in the occupation," PARIS, Aug, 23 (A') France is planning to take over French Indo-China when it is liberated from the Japanese despite re ports from Chungking that the surrender plans call for Chinese and British occupation. "We are definitely taking over," an attache at Gen. De Gaulle's office snld lust night. Surrender Terms A Chungking dispatch yester day said Chinese surrender terms specified that the Chinese would occupy northern lndo China, which Includes its capi tal of Hanoi. In London, a British foreign office commentator said yester day the southern half would be taken over by British troops. He declared France was not "at the moment in a physical position to take over the responsibilities of administering" the colony, j Wave Injured In Auto Wreck . Wave Prlscllla M. Avis, who is on leave from the navy base at Pasco, Wash., received minor injuries last night in an auto mobile accident which occurred 40 miles north of Klamath Falls. Two sailors, on leave from San Diego, were also in the car when the mishap occurred. All three were taken to the Klamath naval air station for treatment and they will be held three or four days under obser vation. If it's a "frozen" article you need, advcrtlso for a used one in the classified. fc7- 3 PHONE 32U v fc . tm imiutimi m uti ai mi , i air I BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:30-6:45 P. M. 't, 4ft Added Enjoyment THIS IS AMERICA (Battle of Supply) ' Plut Lateit New DLMOCHATB MttT PORTLAND, Aug. 23 (V) -J Oregon democratic parly load ers were schodulrd lo-moet with Sid Williams, national organizer of young democrats of America, NAMED ASSESSOR McMlNNVlLLE, Aug. 23 (P) Frod Muhs , was limned Yumhlll county nssoKsor today, replacing Ralph P; ' GUI, Newborn, who resigned 'August 1. Ono out of every seven Ad mirals In thu. ,U. S. nnvy under SO years of nuc.'iind Urn average ago for the 273 Is 1)0.4 years, v IN WWW HM M4,M let Olllft Olitlll !3 I', M. Ends Tonight. 'k On the Same Program "GANGS OF THE WATERFRONT" friday & Saturday 2nd "Both Barrels Blazing" Charles STARRETT vr "A it h ' P Uqtel a: la Hit V 'VP, I' V, u ": ., :y I JOEl ; GAIL McCREA - RUSSELL J'.' HERBERT'- ftV jt ' ' I JUVrk The rate of accidents on school grounds In May, 11)44, was twice that fur April of tho uma year. New THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN THE THE MOST GLAMOROUS SHOW ON ' THE SCREEN! WORLD! ) V I . S Dennis O'KEEFE am Constance MUUKti Mm CARROLL Vk-'tS-.V mmm m.mm mm mm mo VANITIES 2nd Hit - f Hdr-R.bDrMM.ftltaV "7"T.,5 n.nn EDWARD NORJtlS JOHN ABBOTT JUNE STOREY CONTINUOUS SHOWS DAILY. ' BOX OFFICE OPENS 12:30 P, M, ENDS 1 ' "A MEDAL FOR, BENNY" . . '"f " TONIGHT 2nd Hit "SHADOWS OF SUSPICION" : 3 Days Starting TTaodlsiiy She Can Tell You What ,'t- Really To lova a'man with burnrng to fear that love to the point oul-frannlinfl experience of a beautiful glrll New itar Gail Russell face's menace even more deadly than "The Uninvited"! " In X, , i &,,, i In World War II, U. S. farm production liai Increased 28 per cent, as cuinpured with S per, cent In World War I, ' J Today Ive ARDIN Ono KNUOIR Alan MOWMAY Woody HUMAN and hl ORCHItTRA Is! fiileniity bur of terroris tho , til- i 7 v y