PACE EIGHT
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THURSDAY. APRIL 8, 94B
Dewey Goes
All-Out For
iFarm Vote
i V.S ROtTK WITH I)KVEV
TlUtOl'till SrWIASKV April J.
J fiovernor Thomu E. Dewey, mre
t defeat in Nebrk' primary mm hi
knock vital props from undrr hi
presidential chanres, made a full
srale bid today tor I he farm rote in
this arrlrultural state.
" Tlie New Yorker called lor "home
i rule" development of the Missouri
Valley basin, federal price support
of farm products, extensive soil con
servation and maximum production
of food.
Strong Policy
"The time has come." he said in
speech prepared for a rally at
Holdrese. "when we must establish
strong national policy, first against
w aste of our water resources, second
against waste of our soil resources,
and third against waste of our food
resources."
In Nebraska's republican prefer
ential primary next Tuesday he is
stacked ajainst Harold F.. SUssen
and (ieneral Doutlas Mai-Arthur,
who routed him in the Wisconsin
primary. He also is pitted ajainst
Senator Robert A. Taf of Ohio.
Governor Earl Warren of California,
Senator Arthur W. Vandenberf of
Michitan and House Speaker Joseph :
W. Martin Jr.
- Stassen and Taft are considered j
'Dewey's chief opponents in Ne
braska. Under the Nebraska pri
mary system voters indicate their
preference for the candidates but no
one is bound by the results. They
also select the state s 15 delegates to '
the GOP national convention. Tne
delegates are uninstructed.
J In his Holdrege speech. Dewey
endorsed the Pick-Sloan plan for
developing the Missouri river and
"its tributaries.
"I am especially Interested." he
added, "in seeing to it that this great
basin development is carried out as
a project in cooperative control with
full participation of the states and
the property holders in this great
Suspect Held
In Bank Theft
MEMPHIS. Tenn, April 8 11 A
man identified by the federal bureau
'of investigation as a one-time card
dealer and son of a former mayor
;of Grand Junction, Tenn., was be
ing held here today on a charge of
aiding In the holdup of a Spokane
bank two weeks ago.
. He was Robert Howard Roche, 42.
of Spokane.
D. S. Hostetter. special agent in
a. charge of the Memphis FBI. said
to Roche was charged with aiding
Josephine Bemice Ray. now held in
Spokane in a Spokane bank robbery
March 29.
The agent said Roche claimed he
waited outside the bank in a taxi
while the woman entered and held
up the bank. He quoted Roche as
saying he took half the stolen money
and departed.
The banks loss was reported at
11200.
In Seattle. Special Agent J. B
Wilcox said Roche had been a card
dealer at Chelan and Spokane. He
came to the northwest first In 1929
and had been here intermittently
since then, Wilcox said.
Roche's lathe the agent said,
was a former justice of the peace
and mayor of Grand Junction, Tenn.
Jeacher Firing
-Leads To Row
J MYRTLE POINT. Ore.. AprU
Dismissal of two teachers here
J has Involved the school board and
, . Principal Floyd Summers In a dis
i pute with citizens who have pro-
tested the action.
5 Howard Whitaker, board chair
I man. told a delegation of 20 yester
' day that the schools "run smoother"
J without the two teachers. The board
f also defended Summers against ac-
cusations that he was spending too
J- much of his time working as a book
ta keeper for a logging firm.
t The citizens protested the dis
5 missals after the teachers, Mrs.
I, Lucille Trigg and Mrs Vida Prince,
M asserted they were not re-hired be-
cause they complained about lack of
" heat and building sanitary condi
4 tions.
j Board Chairman Whitaker ad-
milled the board perhaps had been
v too zealous in attempting to save
t the taxpayers' money.
Douglas Write-in
1, Campaign Planned
PORTLAND. April 8 IIP, Plans
for a write-in campaign for Justice
William O. Douglas as a vice presi
Sj dential candidate in Oregon s demo-
era tic presidential preference ballot
were reported today.
Monroe Sweetland, publisher of
JJ the Molnlla pioneer and the New-
port News, said the campaign would
be sponsored by a number of Oregon
J weekly newspaper publishers. He
did not list them.
The Molalla publisher Is chairman
J of the re-elect Truman committee
n of Oregon and candidate for demo-
cratlc national committeemen. He
J aid the sponsors consider Douglas
4 an Ideal running mate for the presi-
dent.
There are no candidates filed for
c the vice presidential nomination In
the Oregon preferential primary. A
' token vole would give Douglas a
pledged delegation at the national
convention,
dat40,50,60?"
Man, You're Crazy
ferret ?fwir W. Tti'ititatwti n ripv tt 70. Tr
lx I'l'it'K HMWrr. Coiitnitui tor.'p tor Wfuk.
mm'i.wn Winn fine .i!elr in Iwrtt a lark Of irnn
tiirh many turn hit) wnitirn cull Ttr
Mtrci loiilr TaKIma frr iep. Miner Wl n, thll
jr da. te "gt ccq minted" tnlv KW.
t dnii inrt vry whr-in Kl.nth
Fm, t WnlKrten and Whitman Urn a i
Statesmen Tune Up For Parade
t' f
M H. :. m '::-"J
mm
1 M
f ? I' -
This group, the Golden Statesmen. Is one of IJ quartets entered for the SI"'.BSOS.V
held at tne 1'ellran tlieatre Apnl V- rrom leu are u arren I oults, lead; Jack Hare, tenor
baritojie. and Don Orenfell, bass.
Barbershop
Harmony To
Be Heard
The good old but bersliop Imrmony
of the Buy nineties will be demon
stiati'd In the imnuie ut bitrbershop
nuuilcls nt the lYIInut tlienlre April
Xi. This show, featuring a diwen of
the best quiirteta mi the Pacific
om.m, is being sHn.Miietl by the
Klaiimtli Fulls chupter of the So
ciety for tho Kivseivatlon and Kn
counigenu'iii of llnrber Shop Quiir
let Singing In America. Inc.
Opening music for the program
will be by the "lliiywne onhestra,"
consist inn of Pappy Uonlnn. Fred
Olm. Fred JlotiMon. J. A. McDonald.
Clarence Nelson, Kyle Morgan and
Kuss Cotter.
Tickets limy bo obtained from
inembers of the Kluinulh Fulls
SPKHSIJSA clutpier or ut the fol
lowing places: chamber of com
merce. Main; shepherd Music
compuiiy. ,H5 E Main: J. H. Hous
ton. IH N. 7th. Charlie lliine. chair
man of the ticket rommiitre, said
tlny that saloi are going verv
well, and the affair looks as If It
will be a sell-out.
Missing Man
Found Safe
PORTLAND. April 8 J" A Uni
versity of Washington student who
disappeared from class a month ago
was returned to his family here last
night.
Sheriffs Captain Early Stanley
said the young disabled , veteran.
Stanley Mewhlrter. 23. had been here
for a month. He was traced yester
day to a cleaning firm by a fellow
worker who saw the student's pic
ture on a missing persons leaflet.
The young man walked out of a
classroom at the university March 5
and failed to return. Stanley said
the youth appeared not to be aw are
of his identity when confronted by
deputies. He told them he could re- APPEAL
member nothing prior to March 7 PORTLAND, April 8 ..4 Film
when he awoke here at the Admiral ...
hotel. Later he changed to the New Actor Ed'lrd Ar,u,ld waa lu-r '
Riiz hotel, where he was found. He i terday in behalf of a fund camimiun
had registered as Jess Sitt. Los An- ' 'or the United Nations appe.il for
geles.
i children
He said a n.itlonal goal of 160.000
parade u. be Trusty Escapes,
r; Stan oe. ' r
cur Kecopturcd
SAI.F.M. April 8 ii A state pri
son trusty escaped yesterday, but
his freniom lusted only an hour.
Oletm Van Doluh. 20. St. Helens,
who is serving three years for lar
ceny, escnixil from the prison farm
Guards found him an hour later
only a few block away.
Krater Siaff Gets Away
Wiih Murder On April One
Ti rin In hi u-hrrwinr cam
when Gladys Anderson reported to OOOhas been set.
her employer that Mewhlrter hired
as S;tt March 30 looked like the
man pictured in a leaflet she found
on a street car.
Stuff members of the Kliuimtll
Krater. official organ nf Kluinulh
Union high school, went llierullv
"hog-wild" on their most rrrrnt Is
sue, the Aprir Fool edition, willed
was published Monday.
The entire six puges of (he bi
weekly publication were devilled ex
clusively lo April Fool fiction, much
of It quite pointed In tneiining. nuil
newswrlters wero given their yciulv
opportunity to give vent to nil those
urges that crop tip In every Jour,
nullst. whether nsplilug or profen.
slonnl.
Traiders and Minimis -even the
adviser and editor of the puier
suffered alike nt the lunula of th
staff. Fquully ntrtH-toiin its the story
content wns I he pnge tnuke-iin.with
the fnint pnge upside down ntul
stories and nds placed upside down
sideways and In some enses. cut In
drlf.
The riiDluic of a well-oigimlred
counterfeiting ring, composed of
faculty members, headlined front
page news, complete with n cut of
the gang's "escnnr route." the ring,
pole "chonocd down" and resting
conveniently In Hie mntn otflcewtn
dow. where the "gun-lmttle" be
tween trenslirv neents mid the gnng
took plnre. Actimllv. the picture wm
taken some venrs ngo when the fins
pole hurt rotted out ntul fnllen nil i
the office window.
Faculty members ciime In for n
good share of the ribbing, but the
advertisers also fared jxxirly. One
ad from a locel flower shop urued
renders to "Say It w ith n cactus. '
while a display from another estab
lishment bore a startling "It's
If you wiint dull lend penilU mitt
dingy blrllulity cniiln. The aervlce
lit bml, bin we rtun'l line. If you go
nuuy mini" Still mini her buninens
wieckrr cliilmed of a lociil coffre.
shop. "Fvery riisloiner on the sec
ond Tuestlny of cm-It week will be
esi-oi-tei by tils choice of ii ben, ill
In' lllonde- llllllielle -Itedliend "
llellef wns expressed by I he ml
vlser. Ilowurd H. Holt, Unit he
might very possibly be oH-u for i
new job this week, nlul leius wete
nlso expressed for the future Mantl
ing of Die edlior with the srhoola
mliiiiiilstrntlnn, bill since no tepcr
russtoiis were henrd. the iloor of
Ihe Kniter office has tepoiiedly
been iintmircrt.
it k roii r
POHTI.ANl) .April 8 iVi- The
Pnclflc Northwest's cluisiinns ship
of food itiul cliilhlng'wenl lo Kino-
peau people who need II most, an
on-lhe-s)hit witness reported today.
Klcliiuil MiKlnney, I'm t In ml rep
resentuilve who went to h'uiopc to
helii sujiervlse the distribution, sutil
the peoiile wcie guileful.
One of the longest cunnls In the
world tuns from Leiilngnul lo the
flolillri of t'lltlm, a illstuliie of
ttiOO miles.
Farm Loan
Figure Up
HAI.KM, April II - OiTRnn'i
Wmltl Witr II VKtrritim luivo bur-i-ouimI
$:t,MMI,iHH fi-uiii Hip Mnir
bulltl or liny futiiif) uml linnirn, lli
nlitlo tlt'ituKini'lil ct( VPlriiiiih nirnli
mi id toiliiy,
'I'hr hliilc nl at lt d Klvlnu llir loitoa
J'a ' rn In ll tin. Tlin ItKiim now nif
tlinillllU lilliilll MK).U0() llluulll.
Vein i ii tin u hit UDin ( h fir i in t-i
ih'lltA Ijrftno I'litci ihK II m Kri-v i
run k'rt lniini. Ihry cim Ixtimw up
tn 7ft hi rrnt of the uppi tftlhnl Viitu
hi ini' iniiiur or iniiii uriiiu linitKHU
1 1 in iniuliniiMi Iniiu In $ii(K)i), thr m.
Ii'tr.nt in It In fuilt' tier rriH ntul n..
iivrniHti limn lit to lc rrpiild in 13
)CH,r1.
I'tirii thtwr no'liuiifri.unrd nr.
Nr Wnnl Aib hip liirxpiiiilv mi4
tli-Ira into rih nuw I Item Id nurl
Olllltt tlllll k tT.lllllH
KLAMATH
ANIMAL HOSPITAL
Oittiotiu Tr 1 lilt
J. I-:. IIAIIIIKS I V, I) V. M.
I. AMI. I AMI VMMAM
huiif 4iu Rt inn
It pays to Use the Wnnt-Ads!
CHANGE
ABERDEEN. April 8 i-P Appoint
ment of L. E. Huff, city engineer at
Ontario. Ore., to a corresponding
position at Aberdeen was announced
today by Mayor Ed Lundgren. Huff,
who formerly served with the coast
geodetic survey between Aberdeen
and Knlaloch, Is expected here about
April 15.
OEVERSHARP
razor
taMil Vakia H.00
If llervl Thp W'ondertnl eir
WESTIXCIIOUSE
AMERICA'S FINEST AUTOMATIC WASHER
FULLY Al'TOMATIt'
Just set the dial. A single dial controls wash
ing time and water temperature. Fills,
washes, rinses, damp dries, cleans and shuts
off.
E.VMEIt TO USE
Slanting front and handy loading shelf
eliminates bending and stooping.
YIIH. ATIOM.I'SN
No bolting necessary. Can be installed any
where. SAFE V NIII(, A TIOX
Sofe, thorough woshing action gets clothes
REALLY clean.
CAPACITY IOU-MS
Immediate Installation.
Terms if Desired.
299
95
EAST SOME
APPLIANCES
623 Klamath Ave.
Ph. 8886
O COLGATE SHAVE CREAM
I.! Vtv lAIMIB (
OEVERSHARP -iNJEaOR
Mil VkM 44.
m1J& Rental cream 5
r gSsjfy S tu"$ mt ,SATH whil
I lfV' - .- r-.
CURRIN'S-ar drugs
The Friendly Drug (store"
9th and Main
Phone 4514
0
uf of
uy .
IMPERIAL
b
HIRAM I
WAUIM
I
ski ax
t m in
Mi
$335
4,5 qt.
'2
Pint
10
again i
imperial
i
IP
til M M, lift t
"M WMKIt 4 lOHt.1
VIORia llllMOd
! ll.
91.4 tO be eXaCt! When purchasers of Imperial
were questioned in a nation-wide survey, 91.4 proved to be
rtptat punhastrs. Yc, nine out of ten sty Imperial again !
M.llii.iiaiii I yiilimii .1.
yes-its a De-sae l 1
OnLFORONlY 5 J M
Mi
v5T" lur j r
- ... V I Vitu
THE FINEST SPARKLING WATER! Ji tawm
V .at V
NOTHING
TO ADD BUT
WATER
SAVES H IN COST AND TIME
MAKES TWO FULL 8-INCH LAYERS
oiviti tueei
OOIDIN
WHIM
(. t t C I
NOIIOIINTt
ONIT riNltf
A I'ltKlttrt nf FVil-OrU Cmrriv
rrinchitfd nnttltr ivpi I'oi Bolllini
Cmnpan.v of Klamath tallt
MONEY
SAVING
FFER!
!
Mide hr Hirim Willcer & Soni Inc.
Peorii, III. 116 proof. Blended whiikey.
The uriight whiikiei In thil produce
re 4 jreiri or more old. 30 uraighl
whiikey. 70 griin neuiril ipiriri.
HERE'S ll grand way lo treat your
f.iinily-fliid save iminry. Ymir
grocer i fratiiring Crcinil Coffee now
in big money-Having nllrr. When you
buy tin of Crr-mt Coffer you get a
big package of Crescent Tea Jtiig.i at
no extra cost. Delicious Crescent Cof
fee, full-bodied Crescent 'lea for the
price of the coflVr nlone. Ii's a special
gi-l-actiiaiulrd offer, good for a short
lime only. So get your pound tin of
Crescent Coffee today and get your
big sixlren-btig package of Crescent
'lea lings without one penny extra
cost! Look for the blue and white Cies-
cent display at your grocer'i.
CRESCENT
c o
AN
':
F F E:E
P T E A