SI.
(..
rWO HEHALD AND MEWS
14 SHIP YARDS
AFFECTED WHEN
(Continued from Page One)
Its San Francisco port agent,
James Drury, protested the ar.
rest of AFL pickets at Warner
Brothers studio, saying their
seizure was "negating the de
mocracy for which this war was
fought," and liking the action
of sheriff's doputies to that of
"storm troopers."
New Picket Line
Lumber Picketing AFL
workers continued their at
tempts to close northwest mills
employing CIO workers. That a
new picket line was established
at Coos Bay, Ore., was acknowl
edged by the CIO longshore
men's union there.
Warehousemen The Oakland
membership of Warehouse local
6 of the CIO International Long
shoremen's and Warehousemen's
union authorized 8 stop-work
meeting "whenever necessary"
in the course of negotiations
with more than 30 employers.
The local has requested 46
hours' pay per week at the
present rate with a reduction of
working hours to 40 weekly. '
Longshoremen Return
Striking longshoremen began
returning to their jobs in New
York harbor today, ending a 13
day walkout and easing some
what the nation's troubled labor
situation.
Joseph P. Ryan, president of
' the International Association of
1 Longshoremen (AFL), said the
1 men were working "all along
the line," but it was not made
clear whether the strike had
ended generally. :
In Washington there was lit
tle indication that an agree
ment was near between bitum
inous operators and John L.
Lewis' United Mine Workers
union, as they began their -second
week of conferences in an
effort to settle a dispute involv
ing some 200,000 miners.
The only report Secretary of
Labor Schwellenbach offered
after yesterday's session was
that the union leaders are "still
in the process of arguing" with
the operators' on the issue of
recognition of UMW's foremen's
union.
Another member of President
Truman's cabinet, Secretary of
War Patterson, had stepped in
to the labor picture.' With Vice
Admiral Emory S. Land, war
hipping administrator, as well
as Mayor LaGuardia of New
York, they had urged the strik
ing longshoremen in New York
to return to their jobs. The
mayor had pledged the comple
tion of new contract negotia
tions. Meet Postponed The meeting
of the Neighbors of Woodcraft
slated for Monday night, has
been postponed.
In Bend Joe Hicks is spend
ing Saturday in Bend on busi
ness. .
Telephone
STARTS
5000 QUIT JOBS
Saturday. Oct. 13, 1945
I rat e Archbishop
Taken By Death
ARMAGH, Northern Ireland,
Oct, 13 (P) His Eminence
Joseph Cardinal MacRory, 89,
archbishop of Armagh and pri
mate of all Ireland, died at 7
a. m. (2 a. m EST) today.
In 1942, when American
trooi were landing in northern
Ireland, Cardinal MacRory is
sued a public statement m wnicn
he said he found it "exceeding
ly hard to be patient" when he
thought of "my own corner of
the country overrun by British
and United States soldiers
against the will of my nation."
(Continued from Page One)
expected to begin when all war
time construction controls are
dropped next Monday.
Call on Congress
Snyder will be asked to call
on congress for legislation dele
gating either to OPA or NHA
authority to iix ceuings.
An alternative proposal will
be that President Truman dele
gate such authority under the
second war Dowers act.
It was under an executive
order stemming from that act
that NHA fixed an SBOOu ceiling
on new houses built during the
war. mat celling goes out wun
removal of construction controls.
Mayne Will Attend
Aeronautics Hearing
LAKE VIEW Jack Mayne,
manager of the Lake county
chamber of commerce, will
leave next week for Washing
ton, D. C, to represent Lake
view, Burns and Ontario at the
civil aeronautics board hearing
on Nevada-Pacific's proposed
airline feeder route known as
route 2.
Mayne will also confer with
senators and congressmen on
proposed reconstruction of high
way 395 from New Pine Creek
to Alturas, and will present
stock shrinkage loss figures
from Lake county stockmen.
He will also secure what infor
mation is available on the pos
sibility of DDT spraying of in
fested deer fly areas in Lake
county. Senator Guy Cordon
expects to have some informa
tion to offer as a result of a
meeting with department of ag
riculture omciais.
Deboy Freed From
Jap Prison Camp
LAKE VIEW Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Deboy of Summer Lake
received a letter Saturday from
their son, TS Lloyd E. Deboy,
and it brought the good news
that he was freed from a Japa
nese prison camp and is recu
perating at Manila in the Phil
ippines. It was the first letter
received from him in four years.
although they had received
three stereotyped "prisoner-of-war"
cards.
Continuous Show
Saturday Sunday
Box Office Opens 12:30
4567
TODAY ESQUIRE
BOTH
AUTO
ACCIDENT
PROVES FATAL
TO praH
(Continued from Page One)
Ore., and entered the service
shortly after his 18th birthday.
On his return here he accepted
employment with the Great
Northern railway.
Costigan, whose home town
is Davenport, la., told investi
gating state police officers that
ho joined Smith at tlu; armory
Friday night and the two decid
ed to attend the Potato Festival
dance at Merrill. Costigan said
he took Altamont drive, drove
toward the airport and crossed
east by way of Johns avenue to
Homedale road, considering this
a shorter route than highway 66.
When he reached Homedale
road, Costigan stated, he at
tempted to negotiate the curve
at Johns and Homedale but his
car struck gravel and'overturned
once and came to rest right side
up against a telephone pole.
Heard Crash
Henry Johns, 5789 Homedale,
whose residence is 100 yards
trom tne scene oi me accident,
said he heard the crash and
when he went to the car found
Costigan holding Smith who was
lying on the left front fender.
Johns rushed the two to the hos
pital but Smith was declared
dead on arrival. It is thought
he died instantly, his Injuries in
cluding a fractured skull, crush
ed chest and broken leg.
Costigan was driving a 1931
Ford roadster at the time of the
fatal accident. The car was bad
ly wrecked.
In addition to his parents,
young Smith is survived by
three sisters, Phyllis L., Luana
M. and L. Darlene Smith, all at
home, and his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. O. Dryden of this
city.
Smith was a member of Sa
cred Heart church, a veteran of
World War 2, and a member of
Mt. McLoughlin council No.
2255, Knights of Columbus. His
father Is salesmanager for Smith
Bates Printing company and a
state officer in the Knights of
Columbus.
Final rites will be held Mon
day at 9:30 a. m., from Sacred
Heart church with interment in
Mt. Calvary cemetery. There
will be a recitation of the Holy
Rosary at the Earl Whitlock
chapel Sunday at 8 p. m. Whit
lock's is in charge of all arrange
ments. Prominent Men On
Deer Hunting Trip
LAKE VIEW James Coe of
Portland arrived last week by
plane to spend several days hunt
ing in Lake county. He landed
his plane on the little field at
Hunter's Hot Springs and regis
tered at the hotel there. Coe flew
back to Portland and October 27
is returning with several more
hunters.
Sherman Montrose, well
known war correspondent of
Mill Valley, and Dr. H. C. Pit
kin, prominent physician in San
Francisco, have also been stay
ing at Hunter's Hot Springs hotel
while hunting deer the past
week.
I
THEATRES
Poison Cocktails
Kill 3 Convicts
SAN QUENTIN, Calif., Oct.
12 W) A poison cocktail party
claimed the lives of three Sun
Quentin convicts and loft nine
others "In various degrees of
danger," Warden Clinton Duffy
announced late last night.
Duffy said the survivors ad
mitted In prison hospital they
had drunk a cockinil, brewed
out of poisonous duplicating ma
chine fluid, Wednesday night.
Two of them, Robert Hender
son. 29, a Los Angeles forger.
and Joseph G. Davis, 30, a Los
Angeles murderer, died curly
Thursday. Artls Clark, 36, u ne
gro serving time on a narcotic
charge, succumbed late last
night.
(Continued from Page One)
gun work on the bill because the
senate couldn't agree which com
mittee ought to get it.
. But today the senate seemed
ready to break the deadlock by
creating a brand-new committee
of senators to handle all atomic
proposals.
This committee will be so im
portant that senators have begun
a scramble to get on It. The nine
men who are appointed will help
to make history.
State Legion Head
Urges Strong America
In Speech At Merrill
(Continued from Page One)
section. A boy with a black
dog won first in the pet di
vision but remained unidenti
fied as he failed to come up to
claim his prize. Second pet
prize went to Margaret Slaugh.
In the costume division for
children, Lola Jean, whose last
name was not learned, won
first. Carrol Poo took second.
Several hundred persons were
served 2000 pounds of barbeque
beef at the barbeque luncheon
Saturday, with Klamath baked
potatoes.
The Merrill Huskies played
the Malin Mustangs on the Mer
rill athletic field this afternoon,
and the two day celebration will
be concluded tonight by the
final spud festival annual dance.
350 Acres Of Land
Reseeded By Plane
LAKEVIEW Reseeding of
350 acres of burned over range
land cast of Drake's Deak was
done early this week by airplane.
rne land, wnicn was Dtirnea over
during round-up included that
of Jere Egan, Phil Barry and the
U. S. grazing service. A Cub
trainer from the aero agricul
tural service at Klamath Falls
was used, the plane landing on
the gravel road on the Plush
cut-off. The plane carried a load
of 400 pounds, landing several
times to refill with the grain,
Hans Norland Auto Insurance.
Phone 6060.
Mi OBOUUnOH Mil Ml M ua
SUNDAY
JAP CABINET
I
'S
(Continued from Pag One)
cdly decreasing the position of
the ompcror or altering his cur
rent status under the constitu
tion, These sources quoted Konoya
as saying (hut Hirohito has been
"seriously considering" tho pos
sibility of abdication, which has
been repentedly rumored here,
Newspapers predicted that the
cabinets proposed constitutional
changes would be completed
and submitted to tho privy
council for approvul, In time to
bo presented to the special diet
session scheduled for December,
Drastic Reiormi
MacArthur's directive called
for drastic reforms of Japan's
laws to provide for women's
suffrage, labor unionization,
abolition of oppressive police
and the relaxing of industrial
monopoly.
The allied supreme com
mander bluntly told Shldchura
that liberalization of Japan's
constitution, which has not been
amended since it was promul
gated in 1889, would bo neces
sary to achieve the reforms. Ho
also pointedly reminded tho pre
mier that the government,
should be "the servant rather
than the master of the people."
While Shidehara's govern
ment wrestled with the reform
problem, an allied headquarters
spokesman said that Russian,
British and Chinese troops will
participate with the Americans
In the occupation of Japan.
3 Compton Brothers
To Attend Ceremony
PULLMAN, Wash., Oct. 13 IP)
The three noted Compton broth
ers will attend ceremonies De
cember 14 when Dr. Wilson M.
Compton is Installed formally as
president of Washington State
college. Dean Charles E. McAl
lister, Spokane, president of tho
college Board oi regents, said to
day. Featured address at an after
noon meeting will be presented
by Dr. Karl Compton, for the
past 15 years president of the
Massachusetts Institute of Tech
nology. CONTINUOUS SHOW
MOVES TO MEE
I
DICTATE
Starts Saturday Midnight
.A - .11 I
Broadway's hilarious romantic
comedy mow ou the screen 1
So she
1 heirs the kind of
fun that makes the
world go round...
and round...
and round...
until you're
dizzy with ,
laughterl
MKUff:,"""
matter;' '
'When ruilrouds wore first i
built across the wo.it, trains worn
hold up by howls of buffalo, I
aSSaSfraai PHONE
CONTINUOUS SHOW DAILY OPEN 13.30 P. M.
"Arson Squad -
Sunday it Monday Tuesday
A
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I
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PECK
fLir - . . i Heed
, ' , , Basgr lARRYMORt
J?iSSLJJUI HUNT
1 fmm KMTOt . Ota DOKYU JJ
Second Hit
"Rollin" Plains"
Starring TEX RITTER
PHONE 4572 !5
SAT. SUN. OPEN 12:30 P. M.
WW
picked up the marbles. ..and went
home to make love!
S , . :.
COLUMBIA PICTURES
prtsanU
1MT1WE
KNOX
A SIDNEY BUCHMAN Production
Mapted Irom lh play by Ruth Gordon Screenplay by Sidney Buchman
Frogs do not drink wutur by
mouth they absorb It through
their skins.
mm
iONE 0262 tiSS
0262
ENDS TODAY
Enemy T0h't Law"
THI IOVI STORY Of A
TEMPESTUOUS It ED-HI AD
AND THI TWO-HSTED
MAN SHI WANTIDI
II
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w a
, .1 I f
ENDS TONIGHT
General Dwlght
THE TRUE
2nd Feature, "SCARED STIFF"
COBURN
Tile British government for-t
bade tho Ilmlnon'i Buy company
to give liquor to the Indium,
Continuous Show Bat, Bun
Box OHlce Opens Ui30
TODAY ONLY
"Grisslys
Millions"
SECOND HIT
"BOOTS OF DESTINY'
Sunday Monday
Second Thrill Hit
"Amazing
Adventures"
EUtnhowtr's
GLORY"
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Directed DV (JHAKLtS VIUUK