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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1946)
., .1 r uiiiiUH c r. ..itinn.u- frl Mc .erv with l"' inll" l".,?'.r.y which w.'ic overs"1''.. ' . Ai,,.li'iin ITi: l.'h.io hi. n.l.loVI'll wun " I rlbboni. 1 i ha WUI ?, Nortlie". . . tuinh'l Irvl" ViH; "'rf ""n I 1. and T" T"c nlViio lr h""1 lr';"V f.'ine wan in ,y 'r?,n : ; .Tim, "f " w a .i I Mm H"'.i Klli I'llHIldellll VZa in Klamath ''') i lo make th'lr Hen-:"':" ".,.;VJ wan n 'nicy v:" , Mill "'' Mr. Ml.ll i..n.iin!i ijiiM-"'" flrr'!!"'r.y.:,r a ill mcy s " . Milters Wilde !"" ..II.... i,r,i Kln.niun . ' J friilil WllsnillKlun, Ik. flllltll'll IM " v He will return to Wash c.H.v lo take up mi Killers for h trU- Ldlx Out J..c r.mmert. Told ion uf Mrs. MnrKiir.-t 2,., laboratory tfilmlchin 5 '! 'm,. n( Dr. Jinnm M. J , rocovrrlim at l"lde Ariorny. The family lives t ,J)crby, Employti Essie Kram illrs. Sully Thomas hove .idded to thf salesforre of j. .i.. it 017 Muln. Mm L. ha. .nn.A hi.rL from Wash., and Miw Kraii formrrlv with Wnytal a Apparel kvlnm Lv c Kcdficlcl or ith Falls, wlin has operated lerv In this city tor several I has leased nlMiul lnno fret o( space in me building In lirooklnK Gain to oprn a Krocery. : Horn Utah Mrs. Paul 3D12 S. 6th. and younil ml have returned from a trip to BrlKhnm City, where they visited with l rents. Another First Car To Illlnoli Glenn Slivers of 21101 Orchard mill his aim (Jene, recently returned from the niivy ami two years In the South Pii f lflc. Ii'fl Kiindiiy for Ciiriiovlu. Ill,, called hy I ho serious Illness or Ida miner, worn una been ri'cnlviul thill the fiitlwr illnl Sunday wlillii thu Sllvrra wcif atlll en route. Damage Suit On File Here A liiwmilt ri'inillliiK from an ncclili'iit on IiIkIiwiiv 117 near Fort K In ii ut t h Initt Uctolier 2'i wan fili'd liy (irnnt ('. Uiillc-y and tin I'lilvert Klri1 liiMunniic I'ompiiny with tin circuit clerk today. The defendant, Kveretl (). Johiinon, la hcliiK ailed for $IAIH.4II. $2A0 mill rnne nnitn by Dullry and for $170(1 IH by the limirimrc lomnany. Tile coiiiiiliilut iilli-Uf-H that JohiiHoii wild neKllKent in hia drlvlnil and wan on Die wrmiK aide of II io roud when lain IIIH) Kurd atrtick n Kcderal Iokkiiik truck 0ierated by Duiley hint October, and Unit ho was driv ing over fl.l mllea per hour. l)iiiiuiKi' n m o u ii I I n K to S1IOU.U4 reaultvd to the truck, the ault contlnuca, unci of that amount till but $230 wan paid by the Insurance company. Also Duiley allencs hla truck was out of commission for 32 duya and hia buslnesH was Injured an additional $ lit 1 11.40 by not hav Inn the vehicle. The I'oitland law office of Clupperton and Schnllhorn la reprraenthiK the plnlntlffa. Mrs. Elliott Heads Public Health Body LAKKVlfcW, April 13 Mra. Jo Klllott v.' elected preMidenl of the Luke County I'ubllc lli-ulth nsaorlntlon nl the annual meelliiK held r'rldny noon at a dinner mceUnu ut Hotel Lake view. About 30 member Olid representative, of various or Kiinlutlona were present. Other olflcera elected were Mra. Pat Snndojnlat, vice president; Mra. Mary I'lace, secretary, and Mra. Anne SproKiie. treasurer. Mrs. Gnice Pendleton, chnlrmim of the nomlmitliiK committee, pre sented the list of rnndidiitcs, nil elected unanlmoualy. Mr. and Mra. Klinkhammar art har rtcelvlna th ktva to thtlr naw Chavroltt, tha lirat dalivarod In Klamath falls. John Ashley, Chevrolet dealer, is handing tha keys to KUnkhammer, a poiaio grower ana building contractor is From South Mr. and il Sarver. former Klamath residents, have recently re- to their DronklnKs home in extended visit In south- Ilifornla. err Trip Charles Mck fcdnnr "Toby" Bedul re al this morninK from a two t(:p to San Francisco whore rAvenl on business for the shop. imr i Klamath Mra. c Kay and little dnuuhter B Jo have arrived from nd to spend the summer Jlrj. J. Frank Adams and lara Shaw. lumonla Patient Rav- Drceszen, lfl-venr-old studrnt. snn of f A ln Of 1.-J3 Hillside Is re. flnR sallsfnctorily nl Hill- I'upitnl from an attack of onia. f"7 Mrs. Marie Low. jaeclamation, who under linaior suruerv ni ii.iiuii ' recently. s ImprovInK aun.7 YII,i ner nily announced today. Hoioltal r... c . jl Ijlohnjon, einnlovi.,1 b, n, cmplovmem Jf.i-i.1.. ... a. j. i was taKen tole h0,plt April 10 for "...nuiiiy. ?l Son H . Jace Ray an, nfall.''": .ii : "'".y Jap Prince Released From Jail For Lack Of Evidence Plans Okayed For j FM Broadcasting PORTLAND. April 13 oTi Kndio stations KGW. KOIN. KXL. and Pacific Radio Adver tising service said today they were odvLsed the federal com nuinlcalions commlh.si(in has ap proved basic enttlneerinK pinna for FM broadcasting. Formerly, the stations had only conditional grants. KGW and Pacific Radio AilvcrtlKinn new firm organized by the own ers of KWJJ plon to build transmitting stations on lleuly Heights. KOIN already has a station north of Sylvan, and KXL will erect antenna atop Ml. Scott. Alturas Roundup Set August 24-25 ALTURAS, April 13 After contucllnK other associations In this urea. Alex McMillan, man niicr of the Alturas Hound-Up association, announced AuRust 24 and 23 lis the dates for the round-up to be held here. The Mack Barbour string of horses and Brahma bulls will be used. A carnival and other entertainment will be here for the two-day show. By DUANE HENNES3Y TOKYO. April 13 (AP) Prince MoruiiiiHa NiiKhimnto, only tnem Imt of the Imperial family Jailed as u suspected war criminal, was freed today from Sukhumi prison for lack of evidence. Niishimoto, 72, was iinnry be cuuse the Japanese liaison office fulled to send an automobile to lake him lo the charred ruins, of his mansion. He reudily ac cepted u ride In the Associuted ProsH Jeep. Still In a bad humor when he reached home, the round little man with a bristling handlebar mustache and sleepy eyes threw rocks ut iersistenl Japanese photouruphers. The cameramen Illicitly bowed. He had brushed them off once nlready en route home. Pedestrians and street car rid ers gaped os they recognized Nashlmoto on his Jeep ride. Policemen saluted. The prince drew In his breath shurply at the sight of cherry trees in brilliant bloom and ex claimed: "How beautiful. I never thought 1 would see them this spring." Anger Ebbs His anger ebbing, he said he was well treated in prison. He praised the commandant. Col. Robert M. Hardy, Yakima, Wash. Asked how the prisoners felt alxiut former Premier Hldekl rojn. Nashlmoto replied: "We avoided talking about Tojo and the war." Nashlmoto took part In the Buell Chairman Of Rotary Auction Sale LAKKVIEW, April 13 John Buell, who did such a commend able Job as general chairman of the Rotary auction sole last year, has accepted the job again this year und will hold a meet ing soon with Scott Clevcnger of the 4 11 group and Bill Hollo way of the F11A exhibitors to work out any changes in the rules and regulations and start arrangements for the annual sale. From all indications this year's sule will be larger than last year, with 42 steers already entered. The amount of hogs and lambs to be entered Is still undetermined. The Rotary club will probably hove to arrange ceiling prices on the livestock this year to lake care of all the I exhibitors. Also at an early date, arrangements will be mode for the annual Rotary club visit to 4-H and FFA members. Russo-Jupanese war and rose through vurious Important posts until he became a full general In 1023 und a field marshal In 1032. He was a supreme war councillor and lord custodian of national shrines for many years. Also releused from Sugamo today was stolid, unsmiling Ki- yoshl Gogo, former president of Mitsubishi heavy Industries, also for (nek of evidence thut he was u war criminal. New High School Discus Record Set MILTON-FREE WATER. April 13 (') A new discus record of 13B feet. 3 Inches was set bv Robert Seklnun of Muc-HI in the 10th annual carnival of speed here yesterday. The old mark, 134 feet 3i Inches, was set In 1943 by Cor nell of Moc-Ili. Sektnan made nine points for high honors In the meet, tying for first in the high jump. Track stars from about 21 Oregon, Washington and Idaho high schools were represented. Smith Company Will Open Second Mill CANBY, April. 13 The Ralph L. Smith company will open its second mill here Mon day, April 15, according to an announcement made by A. B. Hood, manager. The company opened one of its March 1 on a one- IIKaAI.D NKWtt. Klamalh lalll, Ore. SATUVDAV, Arrll li, !. Fese Nine Sino-US Group Powerless To Act In Manchu Crisis Baby Slayer Found Guilty YREKA, April 13 Rosie Lee Milliard, 18-yeur-old Weed ne gresa, was found guilty of first degree murder by a superior court jury here Friday after noon. She was indicted in the death of her five-day-old son at Weedlust October. A jury of seven women and five men, including one negro woman, deliberated about three hours before returning the guil ty verdict. Sentence has not yet been possed. Mrs. Milliard testified Thurs day that she kept the buby at her home for two or three days after it was removed from the Weed hospital where it was boxn. On October 15, she said, she no ticed that the baby no longer was moving, believed it dead and threw the body in on out house. That testimony contradicted a confession the girl made when she was arrested at Alton, 111., last November, when she said that she threw the baby, still alive, into the latrine the same day she took it from the hospital. October 11. Her husband, Jerry Milliard, was not arrested in Alton as au thorities believed he knew noth ing of either the boby or tbe crime. He is reported to be in ! Siskiyou county but did not visit 1 his wife during the four-day ! trial. I The girl had been married to Milliard only three months when the baby was born and said that he was not the father of the : child. i By SPENCER DAVIS PEIPiNG. April 13 (I'l Lt. Gen. Alvon C. Glllcm Jr., dis closed today that the Sino- American peace committee of throe, with substitutes huving replaced oil original members, is powerless to act in the Man churiun crisis. mllnm nlrl Vim hni of-ri i i:i I nl H General Marshall, whom he tern-! porarily replaced as the Ameri can member, with the serious ness of the Manchurian situa tion. He is awaiting instructions from Marshall, who em-planed from Washington yesterday to return as President Truman's special envoy to China. The committee marked time today, its fact-finding mission to Manchuria halted short of that civil strife torn territory because of its impotency Return Vital A source close to the commit tee said Marshall's immediate re turn is vital if accomplishments thus far toward unifying China are to be preserved. Marshall personally negotiated both poll-; tical and military truces be tween Chinese government and i communist factions In January. The agreements have not been made effective and the Manchur ian situation admittedly is more tense than when Marshall left for Washington a month ago. A reconnaissance plane dis patched by Bino-American truce headquarters here to the area i north of Shanhaikwan and south of Suichung returned with pho tographs showing five breaks in the Peiping-Mukden railroad, throat of the government com munication line to Manchuria. The government filed protests, charging violation of the cease fire agreement, with truce headquarters. Report On Wheat Due By April 27 PORTLAND, April 13 W) A report on the quantity of wheat in Oregon, probable ship ments and receipts before this year's harvest and the expected need is due by April 27. It will be made by a special wheat survey committee named by the Oregon council, U. S. de partment of agriculture, after a meeting yesterday at which tha problem was discussed. SATURDAY NIGHT -ARMORY- Dancing 9 'Til 1 BALDY'S BAND 74e per Person, Incl. Tox Smooth Dancing on Main Floor Jirterbugging Restricted to Jitterbug Jungle Broadcast over KFLW 9:45 to 10:15 mills here shift busts. The first Bessemer steel rails manufactured In the United States were rolled in 1865. ,WoidIiT '.- . !pim tin, .'...""; 1 treatment. " ' 5?" - Mr. and Mr w..i. l nave returned to EC ?' Cri.no. Klam- tt),o cn,Z , "'man ot Md h.U.nc"...0' Klnmnth lat IW '""rnen to his KLAMATH LUTHERAN CHURCH Croaa and Crescent Streets S. M. Topness, Pastor PALM SUNDAY Sunday School. 9:45 A, M. Colored slides of the Passion of Christ Divine Worship. 11:00 A. M. V'.., eHiI Sermon: "Chriat. King of Sicrtd Concert by the Senior Choir 8:00 P.M. A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL At Your Service! not Wisiaiwptt Y"t r, 3 can Mm. fflp'-l i J rai a. iLei R. H. Ktnaia We can delirer new aew machines but we make old one sew like new. We buy and 11 uiidi ones. We again have a small tup ply of electrical parts and cabinets for rebuilding vari ous makes of treadle ma chines into modern electric models. Precision Work Guaranteed. Phone 6771 Day or Evening. SEWING MACHINE SERVICE Your Independent Dealer 3218 Shasta Way Classified Ads Bring Results. It must give the right support or Choris won't let you wear it 4 PfJONAtlXfD coksimr Mrs. Jennie Leach 13 Prescott St. Phone 8432 Ready for You NOW at Oregon Equipment Company CONSERVE YOUR FURS attend Church Every Sunday First Baptist Church 8:30 9:43 11:00 North 8th and Waahington Sts. CECIL C. BROWN. Pastor SUNDAY SERVICES:- A. M.The Baptist Bible Hour over KFJI A ijl Sund!y School Classes for All Ages '1S P u rnornm9 worship. Menage by the raitor '30 P la' Troinin9 Union for All Group M Evening Worship, Menage by Pastor. ier Cantata Sunday, April 21st, 7:30 P. M. i T7fi US hB oa if hoye .. tdtvo',rt II 1 you yhou II 0T com25 a ' U9 So. Beall FOOD FREEZERS THEY'RE HERE AT LAST . . . America's finest line of Frozen Food Units. Alumi num construction inside and out, 6 inches of approved In sulation, automatic tempera ture controls. Quick action food freezing chambers, big; spacious srejage compart ments theae and many other features are yours when you select a Beall. See rftem today! Beall It America's Finett and Largest Line of Food Freexert lCn F.O.B. Portland Intt. Extra. On Oliploy Oregon Equipment Co. DISTINCTIVE APPAREL Phone 8222 901 Moiy i sm m av m I hill Jm''k y li ri I I Junior Viewpoint on Easter It must be feminine ... it must be new ... it must conform to o junior's figure and a junior's fashion viewpoint. If you know what you, want to wear Easter morn, you'll find It here. If you've not yet decided, come in soon. Our collection of styles for junior figures has never been so great! 127 So. 6th Phone 6617