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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1945)
i ,'WO HERALD AND NEWS IN SHE ITS OFF HEAT :' "(Continued from Pae One) 3ib utllltv strike meeting In i' Undnff Mirlt rnnllfll of the rj ijEato and one of the major cities i it the area affected by tne wan I iFor.mcn of the struck Con- Kim)1)' power company, wnicn rervli"' l scores of communities i.k k. jiw InHiitrlnllrwi lower Sjlcb in, Joined with non-strik- erR taying In plants ana sun rtniiv . The situation was des .....i... . i o "nnrmn!" hv mmnanv jpoli i nen but union leaders fltirl i ; appearea . unniceiy me etnt-ShZ icy crews could continue to Maintain regular service. The Work 're are seeking a 30 cents H Jiour wage increase. Meanwhile, across the coun try new and continuing labor disputes kept about 457,000 workers Idle, including the 216,- (ipO soft coal miners in six I stales who have until Monday 1 lo obey back-to-work orders I from John L. Lewis, United Mine Workers president. Some 3 nt Km miners, however, went lck to the pits yesterday. . is , L.oagnoremen niura I 3 One of the country's major etoppases, the walkout of 35,- 000 AFL longshoremen in New I k..Wn. niDs anHpri after s 18 days, but still smouldering 1 was the bitter fight between an 'i insurgent group and Union f n '- .i v 1. O Dvbi. Tha 'I controversy between the rival A tactions was responsiaie iur yn-v I longing the strike, which stem- med from the union s aenuna ; for a provision in its contract ; Size of cargo net loads. Insurgent leaders issued back to- work orders yesterday, sev eral days after stevedores loyal to Ryan had returned to serv ice some of the hundreds of ships idle in the big harbor. About one half of the strikers Were on the job yesterday, as Byan met with ship owners to negotiate for a new contract. Today the union reported everybody's back." ; 2 In Hollywood, the AFL Screen Actors Guild urged "immediate termination" of the AFL movie ii last March over a jurisdictional i dispute. Producer and union rep Si resentatives continued efforts to settle the controversy, which affects from 3000 to 7000 work s' prs. Picketing continued at studio- gates yesterday. Strike . boilAFc hnvA insisted that all strikers must be rehired before IN II CITIES ; the walkout will be enaea 'X wl i.m ri SET F $ Z (Continued from Page One) : attached to United States forces in the European theater accom- panied Neave to the cells, f Z Neave, in his military career, i was captured by the Germans in 3 the British retreat from Dun , kerque. He escaped from a Ger- man prison camp in 1944. " The indictments were served On Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Robert Ley, Wilhelm KeiteL Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Alfred Rosenberg, Hans Frank, Wil helm Frick, Julius Strelcher, Walther Funk, Hjalmar Schacht Gustav Krupp von Bohlen una Halbach, Karl Doenitz, Erich Raeder, Baldur von Schriach, Fritz Sauckel, Alfred Jodl, Franz von Papen, Arthur Seyss tpquart, Albert Speer, Constan ts von Neurath and Hans Frit zsche. i' -i Visitor - Mrs. Pstrirfc Mr. Auliffe of Fort Klamath was a f; visitor in Klamath Falls Friday. ;! 2 vuicmj Renews Distress of A little Va-tro-nol up wva Donni promptly relieves snlffly, stuffy distress of head cold makei breathing easier. Iio kilpt prmnt many wiuo iium developing U used In time. Try ltl ?ou'll like It I Follow directions In nacksmt. VICKS VA TRO riOL ID A M C IT Saturday Night K.C. HALL Sponsored by Towniend Club Modern and Old Tim Dancing 9:00 'til 1:00 Men 50e Ladles SOc' Friday, Oct. It. 143 "Vinegar Joe" Home For 35th Anniversary MONTEREY, Calif., Oct. 19 Wj A big, silver B-17 from Honolulu 'buzzed" a Carmcl home here yesterday and then landed at the Monterey airport. Out stepped a plain, tall, gangly man wearing a battered cam paign hat. Gen. Joseph Slllwcll was back from the wars just in time to spend his 35th wedding anniversary wun nis lamuy. WARDS DEFIES OF UBOiypo (Continued from Page One) termed them "Illegal require ments. Preceding the last seizure, the WLB had ordered Wards to out into a contract then under ne gotiation a maintenance of mem bership clause, but Avery re fused. He maintained tne wlb orders were merely advisory and were not binding. Seizure Illegal Likewise. Avery has contend' ed that seizure of the properties was illegal. When the govern ment first took control for two weeks in April, 1944, Avery re fused to surrender his office to department of commerce of ficials and he was carried to the street by two soldiers. Other company announce ments yesterday said that wage increases given by the army to some employes will not be re duced. Similar increases will b e given to others, with boosts extended to the union if officials agree after negotiation. Samuel wolcnoK. union nresi- dent, said the union would ask Wards to hold public negotia tions, and he asked that Avery participate. He said that the army witnorawai witnout pay ment of S785.089.70 in back wages was a "serious and gross miscarriage of justice. Protest to Truman "We have protested to Presi dent Truman this failure of the government to meet its ex pressed responsibility to the workers of Montgomery Ward. This has left the government in default ot its own directives." VETS WILL BENEFIT F (Continued from Page One) the time they return to this country to work out a payment plan with, the collector. . . 2. Men who entered the serv ice before the pay-as-you-go tax law went into effect would be granted a similar three-year ex tension for payment of their tax liability on earned income (not in excess of $14,000 earned in civilian life for years prior to 1942. The benefits approved for business were: 1. A one-year-extension, from Dec. 31, 1945, of the period in which corporations may retire their own bonds at less - than face value without recognition of gain. 2. A similar extension of the period in which railroads, which have been through reor ganization proceedings, may cancel out indebtedness without recognition of gain. Details of the enlisted men's service pay forgiveness -remain ed to be worked out. The dates probably will extend from pas sage oi tne aratt act until toe official end of the war. Those who have paid the tax will be entitled to refunds. The revenue loss was described as very slight, because servicemen al ready get an extra $1500 tax exemption above that allowed civilians. In its morning session, the committee took no further ac tion on reduction of excise taxes on such articles as baby powder, gin, silver fox scarfs and lipstick. Prospect for their cut-back to pre-war levels next July 1 as voted by the house, seemed very dim. High School Press ' Conference Slated ' EUGENE, Oct. 19 (IP) The annual uregon high school press conference will resume this fall after a two-year halt. The ses sion, tentatively set for Novem- Der Z4, win occupy only a single day instead of two, as in former years. Classified Ads Bring Results DIRECTIVES Mrs, Claire Earlywine Burnett, 32. (center), former nurse, is recovering In Sin Francises from an excessive dosage of sedatives taken after discussion with her. two husbands, on of whom, virgu bariywin. (lett). emit gunner s mat, tnougnt dead, had )utt rturnd from a Jap prison camp. Svral months ago she married Robrt E. Burnett, (right), navy chltf patty officer. ' Sema Boy Shot While Hunting GRANTS PASS. Oct. 19 P Jimmie Howsley, 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hows ley of Selma, is in a serious con dition in Josephine General hos pital as the result of a wound received Thursday evening from a 22-calibre rifle In the hands of Jose Neal Lee, 14, also of Selma. The boy, wounded in the abdo men and suffering from shock, was brought to the hospital in a private car. Surgery was per formed this morning. Lee, accompanied by Roy Evans, 16, was hunting near Sel ma when the shooting occurred. Lee stated that he did not know the Howsley boy was in the vi cinity. Investigating the shoot ing was Charles C. Johnson of the state police. GRIP Oil JIEII (Continued from Page One) cabinet. Quijano was interior minister and Antille was fin ance minister when Peron re signed October 9 as war min ister, labor minister and vice president under pressure from Campo De Mayo group. Neither Quijano nor Antille appeared in the cabinet which was sworn in yesterday. This version would explain a number of puzzling circum stances: the presence in the cap ital, unmolested, of Adm. Hector Vernengo Lima, a Peron oppon ent who served briefly in the past week as navy minister; and the fact that the army stood idly by and permitted the streets to be dominated by Peron dem onstrators. ) Differences Patched ' As for Gen. Eduardo Avalos, leader of the 'October 9 move ment, , who had taken Peron's post of war minister, one report said he had patched up his dif ferences with the strong man after quitting the war ministry. Midnight brought an. official end to the 24-hour general strike which had paralyzed the capital and left it in the hands .of marching demonstrators many of them youngsters below voting age who professed allegiance to Peron because their apprentice schools had been formed by him. It was estimated the strike bad been 95 per cent effective. In the capital three persons were wounded in a battle be tween Peron supporters and a group which shouted "death to Peron." In Cordoba eight were wounded in a gun battle, i AFL Attorneys Ask For Hearing SEATTLE, Oct. 19 (IP) At torneys for the AFL-Lumber and Sawmill Workers, striking for wage increases, asked the state supreme court at Olympla for a hearing this afternoon on a re quest for a writ of prohibition against a superior court order restraining the picketing of mills employing congress of industrial organizations workers in Pierce and Grays Harbor counties. Counsel for the AFL-United Brotherhood of Carpenters, with which the striking union is affil iated, announced he would ask a writ of certiorari against a temporary restraining order Is sued here yesterday against pic keting a ClO-plant in Seattle. The AFL contends the restrain ers here and at Tacoma and Aberdeen infringe free speech and abrogate all the laws of pic keting of the past 25 years. CAMPAIGN STARTED MEXICO CITY, Oct. 19 VP) A campaign for a nationwide minimum salary of 3 pesos (60 cents, U. S.) daily has been started by the Mexican labor federation (CTM). In regions where the present minimum ex ceeds 3 pesos, a new one of 6 pesos is asked. Hans Norland Fir Insurance. Phon 8060 . WANTED Usherettes CASHIERS Full or Part Time Employment - Apply Esquire Thear Office Too Many Husbands A7 " !- " 7 frl ,S. OFFICER FIRED T (Continued from Pag One) when he was fired upon near the Plaza Bolivar. He was forced to turn back and that resulted in the delay in, Corrigan's dispatches to Washington. There was no authoritative word on the issues involved. Army Displeased Venezuelan sources here spec ulated that lower rank army officers perhaps were displeas ed with the two presidential candidates for the presidency and may have revolted to take over the government. They said the fact that Al fonso Biaggiani, a civilian, has been nominated for the presi dency may have had something to do with the army's desire to revolt. This is the first time in Venezuelan constitutional history that a civilian has re ceived the nomination. The Venezuelan congress is scheduled to meet on April 19 to set the date for . the presi dential elections. Oregon Strawberry Plants Purchased CANBY, Oct. 19 (IP) Several million Oregon strawberry plants are being purchased by growers in the Sacramento val ley, growers here said today. Canby berry gardens said It was shipping a million .plants next month and other growers reported California orders near ly as large. (JOKED Open 1:30 - 6:45 THRILL STony EMBASSY CARACAS ' t LEO G0RCEY i . HUNTZ HALL BUD GORMAN ti i in itdil'' -' "" Starts Saturday Midnight HEDYLAMARR nnnrrvr iiM i inn JUNE ALLOTS l(ft') wirpnoto) Discharge Score For Wac Officers Lowered "WASHINGTON.' Oct. 19 UP) The war department announced today the point dischargo for Wac officers will be reduced from 39 to 37 on November 1. The department previously an. nounced that the point score for enlisted women in the women s army corps will be reduced from 30 to 34 points on isovemoer u. I OF SCIENTISTS (Continued from Page Ono) peacetime workers on atomic en ergy are sufficient to stir deep distrust abroad and invite an international atomic bomb arm amcnt race. He said the government ought to trust scientists to look out for the interests of the United States rather than Impose a "tight censorship" on them. Lot ot Money After all, he said with refer ence to the cost of making the atomic bomb, "two billion dol lars was a lot of money to gam ble on the word of long-haired scientists." (Dr. Urcy is a brisk, ' fairly close-cropped individual him self). Dr. H. J. Curtis of the Oak Ridge, Tenn., atomic laborator ies and others also were In on the news conference. Curtis said of the secrecy proposals: "The implications in this bill the tone of this bill are such that If I were a scientist in a place that had the potentiality of making atom bombs I would feel that 'those fellows in the states are getting ready to Dome ft fire, This bill adds fuel to mat : - H Classified Ads Bring Results. Starts TODAY OF THE TURF! 1 f 3 1 J.:'f, , Her Highness and the Rellhov 9 7 p,. i iioyai mm and to favpjtr Tl TO BE CONTINUED (Continued from Page One) ho still hopes tluit food subsidies can be ended by next July 1. Tlio first step in that direction came with tlio cancellation of a government subsidy to butter processors, with resulting pros pective increase of 5 to 0 conts a pound In retail prices cffcctlvo Novcmbor 8. Phon 4567 Opn Ii30-8i45 Starts ism Youth' Beauty w Gayety Romance , ;;j IT WILL (CT' lire vruro V' . V I v MAKE YOUR Continuous Dally . Open 12i30 P .M. 2 Thrill Hits ' TODAY Starring Henry Fonda Joan Bennett ANOTHER HIT THRILLS! SPILLS! UNDA STIRtlHC' otiN mmm RILEY Hill JACK INGRAM heart sing rt m OUT LOUD! VT? jZ, Ll lid Geese Calling' At t . 't (Wholcsiilors will be permit ted to Increase their prices No vember 1). On tlio other liuiul, thuro Is a good possibility th'ut the current butter ration value of 1U points a pound may bo cut to eight, cffcctlvo October 213. Army Releases Butter One reason, sulci food officials who asked anonymity, Is the re cent rclcuso by ihv ui'iny of 80, 000,000 pounds of butter. At the mimu time there win mi, liullcullun that the butter cuts of incut will conllmio to bo rationed In November: Ol'A at rcudy Is printing incut point charts fur next immlli. Sunday Box OUic TODAY and uefte .A nn r i 9 SMILEY H Jt&i to --nd on million dollars in 60 daysl aouars in 01 loy'i J i A t DINNK u"K(fff HUIM WAlKtl nr lUWHVOC'niDlf((iitilw)NtIWON ' KtuuK nvint . mini . Withdrawal of the five cent pound butter subsidy, effective October 31, murks the beginning of the end ot this wurtlin method ot handling food cost problems. Poacetlma has started mami fiicturers, blowing ii limit their goods uguln, Trade wlndsl mmMH Box Office Opens (i4S P. Mi Always 2 Hits! ENDS TONIGHT "Big House For Girls" Starring MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN JOHN WARBURTON SECOND HIT "THE BAD ONE" With Dolores Del Rio Saturday "Headin1 For The Rib Grande" ANOTHER HIT IOMUND tOWl ANNI jirruTt UWMNCI TIIRNIY m SIUIHOU Optnl Si4l SATURDAY intwt with BURNETTE In ARM I DA A Rtpublle Picture Another Thrill Hit on the Same Program Wimt f St m I ii & ii