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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1945)
TWO HERALD AND NEWS BUSINESS AREA RAFFIC ROUTE STUD! STARTS (Continued from Pago One) one-way street for southbound truffle, and Klamath the one-way for ,. dorthbound traffic. He MgU'l that one-way traffic vol . not bo found an incon Vt' : ice or an unfavorable fac tor ior business on Uain street. He said it would increase park ing space on Main, and that per sons wishing to enter Main from the south could do so by going around the block and coming in on any cross street. Another suggested scheme was to make Walnut, paralleling Klamath on the other side, as one of the one-way routes. Baldock said that he would have to make a thorough survey of all the possibilities from an engineering viewpoint and with the general public convenience and benefit in mind. He said he was not readv to offer any final conclusions, and will press the survey as rapidly as possible, completing it by February i. Circumferential Route Baldock said that whatever route is suggested, construction will probably not be undertaken in the first three-year program after the war. He said further that he be lieves eventually there must be a circumferential route to carry north and southbound traffic, with the ODtion of coming into the business district by the cross- town routes. The circumfer ential route, he indicated, would lie in the general neighborhood of California and Conger avenue. Some opinion was expressed that because of Klamath's unique situation as a city remote from anv other, all traffic should be routed through the business dis trict on a permanent oasis. South Sixth Baldock later went out on the around with City Engineer E. A. Thomas and others to look over the possible routings' at the two ends ot Main street, tie was loin that the Pine and Klamath link proposals In the vicinity of Esplanade and Main might af fect two Drosnective Duuaing sites the first Baptist church property adjoining The Herald and News office, and the Dick Miller truck building site at Eleventh and Klamath. Discussine South Sixth street. Baldock said that four-lanlng that important thoroughfare is on the first year s program. He also indicated that the circunv ferential north-south route by way of Alameda street, 'joining highways No. 97 and 66,. is on the program for the. first three years after tne war. ,-, Arant Discharged From Local Hospital Early Arant, 72, who was in jured at the rodeo grounds in Lakeview over the weekend, was discharged from Klamath Valley hospital Tuesday night and is now resting comfortably at his home at 819 Plum. Arant received a fractured arm and collar bone when he was knocked over by a loose horse during the Labor Day Roundup. He was one of the group who rode horseback from Klamath Falls to Lakeview for the holiday. COURT APPOINTMENT KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 6 Of) The Kansas City Star, in a special dispatch from Washing ton, said today that President Truman will appoint Bennett Champ Clark of Missouri as a member of the District of Co lumbia court of appeals, a life time job paying $12,000 a year. End Of Line For Nagasaki Trolley k sl e? mA Terrific concussion of the atomic bomb completely demolished this tram car in Nagasaki. Ditch at right of car tracks contains bodies of passengers, on tracks can b seen remains of the car. Upright polts carried the overhead trolley wires, (U. S. army shoto obtained from Domel news agency via radio-UUphoto). Thursday, Sept. 6. 1945 Prisoner Escapes From State Pen SALEM, Sept. 6 (P) Robert E. Bennett, 24, escaped from the state prison today, running away from a flax shed where he was emuloved in a prison gun gang He was seen a few minutes later in a nearby grocery store, but got away. Ho was sentenced from Yanv hill county to three years for larceny, entering prison last July 27. He weighs 153 pounds, is S feet Si inches tall, has blue eyes, dark brown hair, and was wearing a blue snirt and blue overalls. FOH OFFICERS TOLD (Continued From Page One) ficers will be released by next July 1. All Branches The point scores for all branches of the army and for all officers except those above the rank of colonel follow: Male officers colonel, lieu tenant colonel and major, 100; captain, first lieutenant and i second lieutenant, 85; warrant officer, and flight officer, 80. The point score for nurses is 65; for Wac officers 44; and for physical therapists and die titians 41. Orders have been sent out to commanding officers in the U. S. and overseas directing that all officers qualified for discharge report for separation within 60 days. Some specialists, required for occupation duty, may be re tained for a time even though they have earned a score mak ing them eligible for discharge. However, they cannot be re tained longer than six months after the. date they become eligible for release. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) "that would never do. Our wives would get one earful of the kind of talk we use and give us the brush-off for good!" There was considerable se rious mulling over of this talk business, ending in universal agreement that "we'll cut it out as soon as we get ashore at home." . They will, too. IF any of you girls at home are ninrrvintf carinttclv aVimtf vmii- man over here philandering around with the mademoiselles and the f rauleins and the Dink and white English ' maidens, you'd better quit it. If you know him intimately as an individual and he s that sort and always has been that sort, and you don't like that sort, you 11 do well to call it off now and save time and trouble. If he did it at home, he's probably doing it nere. But if you're just worrying about him on general principles ana if ne s an AVliKAUi; Amer ican boy temporarily in uniform and lonesomer most of the time than he ever knew before he went into the service that a human being could be. and low in his mind from time to time as only fighting men can under stand, FORGET it. He's going to be all right when you get him back. Sure, he may hold hands with a mademoiselle or a fraulein. and he may go home with her to see her mother and her dod. and like all European females she may have ideas in her head, but if he's just normal American GI boy the first clean, smart, alert, on-her-toes American girl he sees will drive from his mind the memory of ill the made moiselles and the frauleins in Europe. rrr? S. R. O. t ---- '' '.? ,b si . 4 L .x, .V. 33. A picture that is becoming more and more familiar throughout .he nation is this iceno nt Doug las Aircraft's Long Beach, Calif., plant. Contract cancellations lopped oil nearly 12,000 jobs at this plant, while hundreds of thousands were being laid oft by other war Industries in big pro duction centers. O'Connor Family Shares Sheep-Raising Activities Between two and three thou sand feeder lambs were shipped from Lakeview last week by J. D. O'Connor, biggest sheep owner in the county, to his feed ing pens at the Long Bell mill on the Weed highway. O'Connor's 19-year-old son, Jackie, is in charge of the feed ing yards. He grinds all the hay and grain here for a mixed formula for the lambs, takes care of the sick ones, treats sheep who nibble at the many poison ous plants on the range, and rides herd on the flocks, pro tecting them from preying animals. Dan, 21, is in charge of the O'Connor holdings in California, where the ewes are shipped for winter lambing. He takes care of the lambing operations during the winter and shearing in the spring. O Connor supervises both his Oregon and California opera tions, sales, buying and wool marketing. Right now he is in California making reparations for shipping the ewes down for Patrols View Jap Capital; Entry Planned (Continued From Page One) greatest airborne troop move ment. Every transport plane will be utilized. Allied commanders in Singa pore today reported that sur rendered Japanese forces there include 85 generals, an unknown number of admirals, and 85,000 troops. An American amphibious force led by the veteran Vice Adm. Daniel E. Barbey mean while neared the coast of Korea, fully armed and alert although expecting no trouble in occupy ing the north central coastal town of Jinsen. Some reports in dicated Koreans had been at tacking Japanese, who would welcome the American arrival. Revolt Told Taking time out from name calling over who lost the war, the Tokyo press today disclosed one virtual revolt of Koreans had occurred in mid-August at Seoul (Keijo) as Russians ap proached. Demonstrators wel comed the soviet forces and seized control of the local gov ernment from the Japanese, the newspapers Malnichi and Nip pon Times reported. They also disclosed that 20,000 Korean po litical prisoners now have been freed. ESQUIRE AND TOWER Starting SUNDAY in the Unemployment 4;; ""t!? the lambing season, mending fence, getting the sheds ready and digging water holes under the AAA. Sheep Sellout In spite of the wonderful mar ket for sheep and wool, most of the former big sheep holders in Klamath county have sold out on account of not being able to obtain experienced help. O'Con. nor who used to feed and fatten 11,000 lambs in the shed, and did so last year, has cut down his holdings for the same reason. Foreign Labor Many Nevada sheepmen are hiring Bascos from the border land between France and Spain, because of their aptitude for handling sheep, but because of the expense involved in training the men who do not speak Eng lish, in modern operational prac tices, many owners would rather sell out. Wool grown In Oregon Is mostly sold in, Boston and San Francisco. 1945 market prices were extremely good, according to growers' report. Hani Norland Auto Insurance. Phone 6060. Box Office Opens 6:45 ANOTHER HIT ON BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:30-6:45 TELEPHONE 4567 Theater I ! Car Trouble Delayed Missing Pickers OREGON CITY, Sept. 8 (IP) Reported missing in the High Rock area of Mt. Hood, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Welsh, huckleberry pickers, nave been found. A search was started for them yesterday when it was re ported they had failed to re turn from a projected weekend excursion. They explained au tomobile engine trouble delayed them. Quake Recorded At Institute PASADENA, Calif.. Sept. 6 OP) An earthquake about 6400 miles westerly, probably in the region of New Britain, was recorded today at 8:02:35 a. m Pacific war time at California Institute of Technology. Dr. Charles Richter, seismo logist, said that two quakes reg istered at 3:01:54 p. m. and 3:12:55 p. m. were probably in the same region. RESUME FLIGHTS PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. 6 (IP) Northwest Airlines will resume flights Into Wenatchcc, Wash., September 15, stopping there once a day each way, officials said today. New Today JUDITH OIBSON THE SAME PROGRAM with JOHN TRENT Marjorie Reynolds mm Ward Bond, Double, Stop Here On Way To Movie Set Wunl lloml, husky nioviu vil lain with his equally husky double, Fred Oramim, arrived in Klmmith Fulls Wednesday, Tncy will bo ut tho Wlllurd hotel for several duys liufuro joining tho Unlvorsul Studios unit ut Diamond' luku for tho filming of "Canyon Passage," Duck ami door hunting first lurod Bond to Klamath basin in ll)4a. to enjoy thu sport with his uncles, Cluiunce and Harry Huntley, of Morrill. Ho met Matt Finuignn and has accept ed his liivltution to hunt with him this season, lioiul started, his movio career "acclclentuly," ho said. Fourteen football players frum u south ern California collage were picked for some scenes to bo shot at Anapolls in '20. Bond who was u sophomore was one of tho fourteen, When ho grad uated, ho was unublo to work n t construction engineering which ho hud studied for, and started working hi pictures. Ha has followed this work ever since, freelancing bttw sen MGM, Universal and other studios. Bond, who will play tho vil lain "Honey Bragg" in "Cun yon Passuge," Is not always a villain in pictures. Ho has played in "Dakota" and "Ex pendable" with John Wayno. "Tho Sulllvans," and several western pictures, Graham, a stunt man, is also Continuous Show Dally Open 12:30 Ends Tonight "Bringing Up Baby" Second Hit- "The Falcon In Hollywood" Friday and Saturday WuAlVXl fNTB)TAlNMWT Si r" - 1.3 E. Monnon in 2nd HIT LAIRD CREGAR LINDA DARNELL IGE0RGE SANDERS 7 JT000O ' f MAIYIfTH ' ' M utiiUitt A-ii I VY IP Ollnn IAN OAM VL J I l hye MARLOWE W iHC U AkmNATtBt V 1 HELD OVER 1 MORE DAY a frooluuca. Ho does not always play doubles, but was chosen to double, for Bond bccuiiso of his similar physique and way ot walking. This Is Gruhuin's first trip to Klamath Fulls, uml ho stild that ho hopes to do noma hunting while hero, Filming tho pic ture Is expected to take from three to flvo weeks, depending on tho weather, tho men stild. ClusMlCicri Ads Bring Results. ii nil -.-.) i a mi 4i yt iiii.i in miir' SATURDAY MIDNIGHT v' 'tis f vt a success STORY. H? ASUPHR6 ' .AkT SCRKN If 'VI I riT-r" it MMiBMiiniiii L BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:30 I:4S P. M. STARTS TODAY ft' Astounding and spectacular odvn rore..,rvallng th secret sect of war rior maidens pitting Jhelr primitive weapons against the ruthless assault of brutal and cun nlng trespassers! ra MACLANE DOUGLAS For Your Added Scraen Thrills HARRY OWENS and His ROYAL HAWAIIANS Comedy LATEST NEWS 1VENTS giro) Box Olllce Optna 6i45 ENDS TONIGHT "3 IS A FAMILY" Second Hit "2 O'CLOCK COURAGE" Friday and Saturday Saga of the Untamed West! t-4 Kj-i. VI I ALLAN LANE . jSrrXs Thrill Oli-J Ai)vmuiiEijr,,, TmuLLSi w