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r .thank jsmciNS malcolm pley
, Editor Manaiintf Editor
A temporary aombtnitlon of tt Evening Herald and th
Klamath New, pub.uh.jd every afternoon except Sunday
. ft Kp) na do and Pin atraau. Ktamaih fulls. Oregon.- by the
Harald PublUning Co. and the News Pubiiahtng Company.
Member,
Aaaoolatad Praia
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
Today's Roundup ,
By MALCOLM EPLEY-
HOPE ran out today for Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Dieter of Tulclake, parents of Staff Serg
eant Bill Dieter. They were informed at last
nd definitely by tho war de
partment that Bill was killed
In action on April 18, 1942,
the day of the Doolittle raid
on Japan. Bill was an air
crewman on that historic at
tack, and until today's fateful
news, was listed as missing in
action.
The parents of Bill Dieter
had received no definite word
In the long months since the
raid, but there had been things
to keep alive a faint hopo.
EPLEY
There was, for instance, the paragraph in the
book, "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo," by Capt.
Ted Lawson, one of the Doolittle fliers, quoting
Wendell Furnas, an American who came back
bn the Gripsholm. Furnas spent some time
in a Jap prison, and reported he saw or spoke
to eight of the Doolittle crew, imprisoned in
the same place. Quoting the book:
"He said there was a little fellow who didn't
' say much whose name sounded like Deeter.
That was Corporal Bill Dieter."
Today's news shows that it wasn't Bill, after
ail, Lt. Chase Nielsen was in the group men
tioned by Furnas, and it was presumably Niel
sen, released just a few days ago, who dis
closed the truth about Sergeant Dieter. Nielsen
Was navigator on the plane in which Bill flew
Over Japan, and he knew, of course, what
happened.
Sergeant Dieter was the only man from our
area who participated in the heroic Doolittle
raid. We salute his memory. ,
,
Psychological Blow
THE release of four of the Doolittle fliers
and the announcement about Bill Dieter has
slanted public attention back to the 1942 raid,
even in the midst of the stirring events ac
companying the Japanese surrender. ,
It is good, in a time of triumph, to recall
daring incidents that lifted our spirits in a
less auspicious period of the war. One of
those was the Doolittle raid, a tremendous
psychological blow for the American cause, and
terrific feat. Eighty men rode the sixteen
planes over Japan. Fifteen of the sixteen planes
reached China, and 75 of the 80 men. AU
planes were lost, excepting one that landed in
Russia) but not one was shot down in the raid.
He Saw Them Take Off
PAUL HAINES, Herald and News sports
editor, saw the Doolittle fliers take. off. .
Paul Was on the heavy cruiser Vincennes,
; Which with the USS Nashville, escorted the
carrier Hornet, base ship of the Doolittle planes.
" He had gun watch on the morning of April 18, ;
. 1942, and from that vantage point saw through
the haze as the B-25's left the deck of the
Hornet and circled back over the Vincennes.
"It seemed to us they barely got off," Paul
said today. "There wasn't much evidence of
excitement among our gang. The comment
went about like this: There they go. We hope
they bomb h out of them." The planes
got Into formation and flew out of sight in
the direction of Japan.
"The Hornet, the Vincennes and the Nash
ville lost no time in getting out of there. We
made full speed, picked up the rest of the task
force which was waiting farther back, and
hightailed it back to Pearl Harbor.
"In all that run up close to Japan and back,
we never saw a Japanese plane. We never
saw a Japanese ship, except a low-slung boat
Which the Nashville sank. It was after that
. incident that the Doolittle gang took off. It
was feared the Jap ship may have had time
to radio a warning to Japan."
i H
medium-good 308 lb. slaughter calves
13.75.
Salable hogs 100, market firm; few
packages good -choice 210-303 lb. barrows
Market
Quotations
ana gnu oaa
Salable sheen 550:
good-choice lambs scarce quoted $13.00
14.00; medium-good yearlings $10.00-
li.oo, common-good
DENVER. Aur.
able and total sheep 3000; market very
slow; slaughter lambs 25-40 cents lower,
choice trucktns $13.75-85; load choice
102 lb. fed lambs 913.75, good-choice
NEW YORK, A tig. 30 CAP) Mixed
price tendencies perflated In today'
stock market with both sellera and buy
r exhibiting considerable timidity.
largely i3.za-5U, tew gooa iz.w-i3.w:
ewes weak to 25 cents lower, several
lots good-choice $8.00 to smaller killers,
common-medium laraelv $4.30-5.50: me
Dealings dwindled after the opening
nd fractional variations ruled near
dium good truckin
Biiaaay,
Closing quotations:
Sieaay ai id.w-o.
- Am uir at ray
Am Tel & Tel
, AntutandA
PORTLAND, Ore.,
Salable cattle total
market fairly active,
Calif Packing
RB4
181'
334
324
common-meaium sieers fii.ou-i4.oo; cut
ters down to $8.50: few stockers 410.00-
Commonwealth At Sou
Curtls-WrlKht
ai iracior ....
.. ; . 69'
w. 6i,
12.00.... common-medium heifers $9.50
13.00; canner-cutter cows largely $6.50
8.00; fat dairy -type cows to $9.00; me-
General Electric i..
General Motors
Gt Nor Ry prd
' Illinois Central
. Int Harvester
Kennecott
Lockheed
71
: , 51
; 321
, 89,
37T,
0
' on i.i
aium Dee i cows up 10 su.so; common
medium sausaae bulls $8.50-10.00: srood-
choice vealera $13.60
calves $13 00.
Salable hogs total 100: market active,
steady; barrows and gilts $15.75; sows
$13.00: choice 86 lb, feeder pigs $21.00.
Salable sheep 500, total 1100; market
slow, about steady; few good-choice
Lone-Bell "A"
Montgomery Ward
Nash-Kelv .....
N Y Central
Northern PacKic
Pac Gas & El
Packard Motor .....
, J C Pcnnoy
la mm viz.sa-ij.vo;
iu.uu: soon norn
The North Portland
win be closed Jaoor
enna h h ..
Rcpuhllc Steel
Richfield Oil ;..
Safeway Stores
Sears Roebuck
" 67
40
7
.. 122
37;
.. , 25B
- 12
Potatoes
Southern Pacific
standard Brands
Sunshine Mining
Trans-America ..
Union Oil Calif
Union Pacffl? ....
, 14",
..
..... 22
........137
CHICAGO. Aur
toes: arrival! 68. on
shipments 903.
Warner Pictures - ,. ..".. 17
LIVESTOCK
, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Aug;. 30
(AP-USDAl Salable cattle 400: salable
calves 78; market unevenly steady; steers
. nominal, few common 972 lb. dairy-bred
steers 413.AO-1.1.30; Jond medium 880 lb,
Idnho heifers 13,00 strong; package good
1170 lb. cows SI3.75; three loads mixed
common-good range cows offered; two
loads 840 lb, Idaho cutters W.00; can
nera t7.0O-B.00; calves steady, load
v s steel
. 71
, .. .... 46
new stocks: supplies rather light, de
mand slow, market steady for best
stocks; Idaho Russet Burbanks, U. S.
No. 1, $3.35-3.40: Washington Russet
Burbanks, U. S. No. 1, $3.33: Nebraska
Red Warbas, U. S, No. 1, $2.30-3.10; Cob
blers, commercial, $2.00.
;WHEAT
CHtCAr.n Aiitf
ing of rye futures on a report that per
mits will be issued for innri nf 1 nm .
000 bushels of the nation's visible supply
in terminals caused rye prices to leap
A GEM of THOUGHT
A very nice gentleman named Frd
At an amateur golf game once laid,
"Alack and alas, .
If those balls lost in the grass
Could hear, they'd blush fiery red."
Earache Remedy 25c
From Doc and Idella's Drug
Phone 8468
Tbursd.v. Aug. 30. 184S
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON
A ASHINGTON, Aug. 30 Pressure from
YV mothers who want their sons back home
and servicemen is playing havoc with the
discharge and draft programs. More irate mail
from them has been received in congress, and
therefore presumably also at the White House
and war departments, than upon all other sub
jects combined since V-J Day.
At that time, you will recall, the govern
ment came forward with the program retain
ing about two-thirds of the armed strength for
the present peacetime, and i planned a gradual
demobilization over the long period of 12 to
18 months. Well, the navy changed its tune
and figures two weeks later, announcing what
was called "a speedy step-up" in demobiliza
tion and it was all of that, and more. It
more than doubled its earlier demobilization
plan. '
Army Cur
THE army announced its retreat through Mr.
Truman's draft message to congress. Where
as on V-J Day the army had proclaimed inten
tion of keeping an occupation force of 2,700,000,
it came down to 1,200,000 in the Truman recom
mendation. But the army covered its retreat with a
flanking maneuver. It inspired Mr. Truman to
propose the first peacetime draft in all history
of youths 18 to 23. To me this looks like a
sort of universal military training program
the youth draft in a disguise of demobilization
requirements. The training would presumably
be mostly in police work in foreign lands, its
scope limited to 500,000 men, and the age limit
of course runs a little higher than the youth
draft plan, but the basic idea is not dissimilar.
It would be a peacetime draft of youth for two
years of army service.
Mothers' Messages
AS I said, congress has been hearing from
mothers also the mothers of youth to be
drafted and showed public signs of resistance
to the Truman message to the house and sen
ate military affairs committee as soon at it
arrived. Adding volume and substance to their
resistance was a growing suspicion of army
figures, already once altered in two weeks.
A strong movement is developing behind the
position taken by Chairman May of the house
committee who wants to wait three months
before doing anything. That is the course like
ly to be taken by .congress.
How Many Volunteers?
THE argument now all runs down into the
simple question, of how many men will
want to remain as volunteers in the service.
The proposition Mr. Truman submitted was
based on the assumption there will only be
300,000. He figured 300,000 men would be
produced by continuing the draft "at its present
rate," so you would think only 400,000 men
would have to be retained in the army to
make the heeded 1,200,000 for the occupational
force. But he left this last part of it open,
saying additional supporting forces would be
needed in this country, but he did not know
bow many. (If the army can figure how many it
needs for occupation abroad, why can It not
figure a home supporting force precisely?)
These considerations leave the figures a little
fuzzy. You can pull the fuzz from them all day
long and you can only come to the conclusion
that the army does not know:
(A) How many will volunteer to remain in,
until it asks them, and
(B) Cannot calculate anything else until this
is proved conclusively.
Jobs Go Begging
THE change in the demobilization plan, how
ever, may upset the Truman economic
calculations somewhat. A swifter demobiliza
tion will release men for civilian employment
faster and complicate that problem if It de
velops severely. i
To date there are far more jobs calling for
workers in my community than any army
releases can fill, and the want-ads in the news
papers I read contain 10 to 1000 more appli
cations for workers, than for work.
lilumatirs
gooa sows vio.uu.
market nominal;
ewes y3.00-6.00.
30 'AP-UBDA1 Ssl
From the Klamath Herald
August 30, 1935
The slides on the side of Mt.
Shasta hampered the opening of
the national 20-30 clubs conven
feeding lambs about
Aug. 30 (AP-USDAr
100. calves total 23:
mostly steady;
tion here, preventing many vis
itors from arriving in time.
Gov. Charles H. Martin was a
brief visitor here today.
- 14.60: food sraas
From the Klamath Republican
August 31, 1905
Those looking for a location
would do well to give Keno a
call and Investigate before lo
cating. Now is the time to get
in on the ground floor. The
government works and the rail
road will make business for
someone, and that before long.
Old Goose.
a
Miss Edna Houston and Gail
Parrish left for Portland to at
tend St. Mary's academy.
common graces ss.uu-
iarnr ii.au! anon
livestock market
Day. 1
M I AP.imnAl-Pnti.
track i.ifl. tnta! II. fi
upward the pcrmUtlbl, 8 cent, biuhel
limit today.
Wheat and oati firmed tn aympathy
after early setback., with ihort-coverlng
In oata alKO attributed to talk of export
Interest In that grain.
Rye closed 4'. lo Sc higher than the
previous finish, September SMOV,.
wheat was un !4 tn V.e. fUnlmhr
m (idi u.. ,..
S1.65H, corn was '.c off to V.e up, De
cember Si. IS', oats were to lV.e
hfeher. September Sfl1ic. and barley
was up 2i to S'sc, September S1.07H.
Store
Latter Day Saint Women
Sister Mary Ellsworth
Will ipeok to you
Saturday, Sept. 1, at 1:00 P. M.
In the Library Clubroom
Your Lady Friends Art Welcome
SIDE GLANCES
fife " M(
wny, yes, iimnin, 1 in the buby-sitter who put llio nd In
the pnep I lust thought I'd eurn i lillle money nftcr sit
ting with three generations of children free I"
turo by MacArthur will help
Wainwright to overcome his
feelings about that surrender.
He Isn't the type who ever
could look on himself as a hero,
but the American people would
like him to know that they re
gard him as a hero. We want
The
War Today
Br DeWITT MicKENZIE
Associated Press War Analyst
WJlttMM'MMMWVaMMa,WMsNaaw
Uncle Sam's Lt. General Jona
than M. Wainwright, who is now
en route to Japan after his re
lease from a Jap prison camp in
Manchuria where he has been
buried alive r"
since his sur- f.
render of
the American
force at Corre-
gidor, has be
come over.
night one of
ON SALE
THURSDAY
FRIDAY ,J
SATURDAY
the leading .
ft v r s uitmiuea
n the great
drama, which
is unfolding in
Tokyo bay.
Humbled
MacKENZlE
All this is quite unwitting on
Walnwright's part. On the con
trary It's the last thing he would
have expected. - Throughout his
terrible years Of Imprisonment
he has been tortured with the
nightmare of his surrender. ' He
thought he' must be in disgrace
with the folks back .home.
Even now he can hardly
understand his elevation to
fame. You get that from his
humble statements but more
strikingly from the years of hell
that show In the eyes of the ra
dioed photo which was taken on
his release. That picture haunts
one, for it tells the story of a
man who thought he had failed
in his great stewardship. Read
his statement to the press,
His Apology
"I have had very little direct
contact with my country or of
ficial agencies thereof or even
with my family for over three
years, but such contacts here and
there as 1 have had have caused
me to believe that the adminis
tration, the war department and
the American people have ac
cepted my dire disaster with
forebearance and generosity
which perhaps are unique in the
experience of a defeated com
mander." .
Place beside this apologetic re
LADY
mm
ma
39 BOOKS
for KIDDIES
Toytowa OAc
Theatre . . 07
mark Wainwright's comment
when arrogant ana brutal. Gen.
eral Homma made his second de.
SUTTON
BATH MITT
Powder- CO.e
filled . . . 09
I I
mand for American surrender
of the hard-pressed ' American
forces. This is related not by
Wainwright but by a fellow of
ficer who remains anonymous.
Said the American commander:
"I've been to general staff
school and the war college, but
they never taugiit me what to do
if I was called upon to surren
der. I gueso we shall have to
continue fighting.'! ,
Finally there was nothing left
for Wainwright to do but ca
pitulate, or sacrifice the lives of
his entire command without rea
son. . '
"My gallant troops," he says,
"had perhaps made a defense
against m o r t overwhelming
odds, under more disadvantag
eous circumstances,' than-troops
of the American army had ever
been confronted with In his
tory." .
To Attend Surrender
' So It is particularly fitting
that General MacArthur should
have invited Wainwright, and
members of the lattcr's staff who
were in prison with him, to be
present at the formal surrender
of Japan aboard the battleship
Missouri. In replying to Mac
Arthur's message, Wainwright
said of his colleagues:
"All this group were with me
on the tragic day when I had to
surrender, and I'm especially
anxious that they be present
when we accept the Japanese
surrender."
Moral Victory
It Is to be hoped that this ges-
2.25 A YER
LUXURIA
Face 4 50
Cream . . .
an
FORMULA 20
SHAMPOO
6-ounce A AC
bottle . . , 9
WEBSTER
DICTIONARY
Clear.
cone,
Tolling
The Editor
UHire KrintHl hare mutt nai M mart
than loo words In Isnalh. must bo writ
tin lt(ioi on ONI liul al tho aapsr
onts, and must so llinad. Oentrlfautloni
toiiowini these rules, art warmly wot'
APPRECIATION
TULELAKE. Calif. (To the
Editor) I wish to thank those
responslblo (or Including ourj
n..l..l.t.. n. t, l.n...t.. ......I
memorial. It wits a very nlco
thing to do and is Just one moro
thing to muke us fool that we
are nil ono big community, nnd
truly touched tia deeply,
Sincerely yours.
tulkLake SUBSCRIBER.
' TRAGEDY
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore, (To
tho Editor) This Is the day on
which an act transpired, for
which I'm sure thcro Is abso
lutely no excuse. Tragedy? Per
hupsl It Is to the heart oi a boy
at any rate. But would a motor
ist understand that? Is his head
und heart too full of transmis
sion urease, his veins too full of
gasoline io understand? This
motorist killed a llttlo brown
and white dog. Only a dog, but
1. could huvo been soiituono's
son or daughter. If he Just
couldn't stop, well, supposing It
him to know we fully recognlxe
that his stand at Corregldor was
a great moral victory, and that
it was a mighty inspiration for
tho fighting men who went on lo
victory.
Uncle Sam says "well dono"
to a gallant man who will go
down in history as having con
tributed much to the allied
cause.
P, 3. Wainwright was award
ed tho Distinguished Service
Cross in Chungking yontnrduy
for extraordinary horoiKtri in ac.
1 tion In the Philippines in 1942.
I
7th & Main St.
BUBBLE BATH
CHARM (Limit 2) .
BEAUTY SHAMPOO (Limit i)
NOURISHING BABY FOOD (Limit i)
ABSORBDfE
For athlete's foot.
U5 fix... (Limit 1) . . .
ACIDINE POWDER
For gastric oddity. 75o ill. ....
taxotlv., Ruffular Ma 1.
CASCARA AROMATIC
Loxotiv.. 2-oz. (Limit 1)
DOAN'8 PILLS
Mild diuretic,
76a sis., (Limit 1)
DOBELL'S SOLUTION
Mouth wash. Pint bottle lor , , ,
EX-LAX LAXATIVE
Chocolat. ngular 2Se ilie , ,
FLETCHER'S CASTORIA
Children'! laxative, 40o flu . .
OEM BLADES
8lngle-edge, Mlore
motto. Package 5 .
HOPPER'S CREAM.
For lac. Homog.nixd, 1.10 itx.
INNERCLEAN HERBAL
Laxatly.. Hs)gular 80a oltas ....
JOHNSON'S TALCUM
. For baby. 4-ounce ill. lor ... .
89c FOUNTAIN PEN
PaoVard, Smooth-writing ,
79(
NOTE BOOK cc
R.ady brand, Asoortad tlral . Q
SHEAFFER'S
Skrip-lnk, 2-ouncoo . ,
15(
LIBRARY PASTE
Sanlord, Z's-ounc. ar lot .
10c
se59
RITE RITE PENCIL
Thr.adlln., Thin l.ad . . ,
125
M FIOIMl IXCIII TIX (N TOILtTMII. lllOltl AND (ILIPOIDI
had boon a small child. If In
could hkvo, and didn't, well,
what de you think?
Night after night, this llttlo
dog proved his worth watch
dug pur oxcollcnco, 1 would not
have taken $800 fur him. The
Hani Norland Fire Insurant:
Phone (010.
Radio Programs
UC II MutuslDon Lte
kid brother? no wouldn't lam
of prico, So, If you should meet
lis motor si. u eune try to con
Thuri. Evening, Aug. SO, 19U
voy my sincere opinion of him
to him. I can't express it,
Sincerely yours,
UEOlfaK M. NELSON,
Trade Bureau Asks
Medical Expansion
PORTLAND, Ore,, Aug. 30 (IT)
The Portland retail (ratio bureau
asked tho veterans' administra
tion today for Immodluto expan
sion of hospllul and medical
services In the northwest,
The buroau uraad Washington
and Oregon rosldcnts to appeal
for enlargement of tho hospital
here to UUUO beds; larger quar
ters at Boise, Idaho, Walla
Walla, Wash., anil Roteburg,
Ore., and a now service In south
ern Oregon.
Social Security
To Close Saturdays
In conformity with the prac
tices oftlio government ami fed
eral security agencies, the Klam
ath Kails field office of tho so
cial security board will go on a
40-hour week beginning this
week.
The office will be cloned on
Saturday from now on. Regular
office hours will bo from 0:1)0
until S, Monday through Friday.
onto a. ni, (Isarlsl
II o I I s r,
Nsws
ill It I n nor
Oanra
lilO Tfssiurr Ms
UtS
till llsrrr Sir.
Half's Or.
rhsslrs
llOO Msrrr Mans
111! Jim ll s r I s,
tJr
umi n 1 1 1 1 1
ilruntiiiaiitl
Friday, Aug, 31, 1945
iM s. m, a s s I
Hum
ill r s r in rial-
Isllal
liOO rrank Ham
I r.
Nsws
1:11 Smlls Tims
iS It s a 1 1 1 It o
Nsws
fill Mnrillhf nsr.
Sllstls
li0tTilaii4 Mil.
Sill
ill I s s It I It
ru.hi.
ill Tats It siT
Tims
1:11 Cliff
waris
iH W I I I I i
I. an, Nsws
ill Marian
llswnsy
ill M I I n R
Msllnss
til Vsilslr Rs
vos
loioo tllttin Moray,
NswS
lllll Nantslltliif ts
ISIS ARHUI
Itlll Mtnthslslwm
LADIES'
WORK GLOVES
All Leather Only
OREGON WOOLEN
tOO Main
MartllHtrs
lllll f ...! Mla-
laiarss
llioo lilra Joan
nls
lllll t'slaitaar a f
Muilo
11:10 Nsws
1 1 US mi.lii
asuiio
Wz
TUFT
TOOniWSH
RiSSRVCO
TO UMIT
QUANTUM
OniHlED
4'tBT0,V
4T
JR. J
ft ate I
O 1
osoysaaasaaaasaaaaiaa aajiaa sai'salOaMatsrfsasasaaaf
V LADY ZITHCR 1
m , v rws a a a . Saw Jm
a
aasaaasaaassaiaaaaaasasaassissaai
CQC
LYSOL DISINFECTANT
For l.mlnln. hyoi.ne. 80o lis. . .
47
MENNEN QUINSANA
47c
mm sl
For olhlola'o loot, 4ounc
- QC NESTLE C0L0RINSE
. all S
Highlights hair. Paokaae S
OLIVE TABLETS
42e
Dr, Edwards',
OOflslM, (Limit 1)
29c
PALMOLIVE SHAVE
Cr.om, Bruihl.M. 9tn, af .
23C QUEST DEODORANT
(SIOVIIUI, sTWTTVIOaTl, sat-VUMWsj
31(
REVELATION
Tooth Powd.t. IBe (Ue. (Limit 1)
TAMP AX TAMPONS
23'
Internal lord- lAl
tarr protection, 10'i , , MmW
79c
UNGUENTINE
Foi I.1I.I ol buml. 8O0 llf.
43c
VASELINE TONIC
Oroomo Ih. hair. 70a .lie .
21
c WILLIAMS GLIDER
Shave Cream, R.gulai 50a ai
ABDOL CAPSULES
Improv.d, AB1DO, U't , , ,
79(
OLAFSEN BERITE B0
6 vllamlni, 0 mln.roli, lOO'i , JL-"
UPJOHN UNICAPS
8 vllamlni, 100 onpnil.i , ,
296
OLAFSEN
AYTINAL
OLAFSEN HALIBUT-eo
Capiul.i. Plain, A & D, BO'f 99
SO HEPTUNA
Capiul.i, tmprond, Pot.nl
.112
lOOcap- 039
3C
2)
1
oassaasasasMaassjsi .. II
. I IM, I Mil 1 Hi,!. n I
, m w m
23
59c U
12c ti
43 n
63 H
39c cU
1240 ka.
1:10 T I II .
Tumi
ill t'slsnlsr a f
Aluslo
iM llisnn llaiav,
Nsws '
ill H s Mills,,
Nsws '
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