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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1948)
PACE TWO HfcRALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUESDAY, MAY 18, 198 l'J!lll " ! i I KOW 'Su'SXl fetl Rememberl l&V'sW.. ' J fama" II! U T TM CINIUlrl l Matla.a l-M p. n. at U. KHir linilf -a- VI shows i II U FT MM,a, iH True! Timely! Terrific! 4? sw TORN FROM a W TODAY'S iK HWDUNES! DANA ANDREWS ? A. I GDC TIERNEY the Iron Cuirram l!Kf UWC Candidates Start Last ' Minute Drive (Continued from Page 1 hive registration majority in Klamath county and reasonably could come up with a record vote. Four Measure In addition to the candidates for office, city voters In Klamath Falls will have four measures calllnit lor tax levies to pass on next Friday. . and any and all of them are going to nave a hard time going through. In recent years voters here have been extremely reluctant to vote any new taxes for anything except schools. One city measure asks for a con tinuing levy of 1', mills for recrea tion purposes, another is for one mill for upkeep of parks and a third asks for a continuing levy of , mill for maintenance of Llnkville ceme tery. The fourth measure is a county affair and will be put before all voters of the county. It asks for three mills for three years for work on the permanent road system of the county. Notional Guardsmen Protect Workers 7S n Packers Strike RAINBOW THEATRE Nr. Shsws It - I II r. V. "Secret Command" W ''Scotland Yard Investigator" Continuous Shows Daily From 1:30 P.M. 35c Till I 40c iTt. Basin Men On Road Group C. E. Motschenbacher of Do iris and Malcolm Epley of Klamath Falls were elected directors of the Oregon section of the US 97 associa tion at a preliminary organisation meeting held at Bend over the week end. Giles French. Moro. was elected chairman of the directors for the Oregon-California section of the as sociation. The Washington section Is also meeting separately to choose I auectors. and within a few weeks a Joint meeting will be held to con clude organization procedure. I A tentative division of obligation . for raising money to promote travel i and do other work for CS 97 set $750 as Klamath's figure. The same apportionment was given Bend. It ; was left up to chambers of com : merce of the various communities j to determine methods of raising the j money. ( Epley and Manager Charles Stark I of the chamber attended from here. Two of several automobiles carrying workers moved toward the strikebound Swift Co., packing plant In St. Paul. Minn., as National (iuardsnien. called out to reslure order, set up a bayonet wall of protection to hold bark strike sympathisers who booed and shou ted catcalls, (iuardsnien flank either side of the automobiles. Doctors And Nurses Kept Busy With Flood Of Injuries, Mostly Children, Over Week-End Ends Todoy Also . Jimmy Wakeiy in 'OKLAHOMA BLUES'' TOMORROW RON RANDELL M OLOaia u.m.v Jr- CATO'MOOI! ItJ 2 nus - 2nd feature : House Refuses To Kill Red Bill WASHINGTON, May 18 I.4V-The house refused by a voice vote today , to kill a bill f curb communist ac tivities in this country. I It acted as it drove toward pass. age tomorrow a bill that would re. ; quire the communist party to reg 1 ister and file financial statements : annually and to Imprison anyone advocating establishment in this , country of a totalitarian govern ment controlled from abroad. The move to kill the bill was made by Rep. Miller R-Conn.i. who told the house the main effect of the measure would, be to "drive under ground the dangerous elements." Doctors and nurses were hard pressed this week-end t keep up with the parade of injured, mostly children, which entered Klamath hospitals for treatment. Susan White. 1-year-old daugh ter of Harold White, route 1 box 604, city, was admitted to Hillside Saturday for treatment after the little girl is thought to have drunk from a bottle of disinfectant. She was later dismissed, apparently re covered from bums. At 5 o'clock Saturday afternoon. Tommy Smith. 7. son of Al Smith of box 1034. Pelican City, was brought to Hillside for lacerations Foulon. 4-year-old daughter of Edward Foulon, paint contractor living at 1740 Johnson, was ad mitted to Hillside's emergency room for lacerations of her lower right leg. Carol had fallen on a foot scraper near the door. She was dismissed. Everybody got a breather for a few minutes until 6:23 p.m. when 6-year-old Jerry "Bobbie" Lump kin was rushed to emergency for treatment of a head injury. The child, it Is understood, was roast ing down a hill when he collided with a car. His head hurts were not as serious as first thought of the upper left arm. received ; nd he was dismissed following when the youngster got tangled i treatment. The child Is the son up in barbed wire. Just 45 minutes later, Carol Russia Second To Recognize Israel ! MOSCOW, May 18 UP) Russia became the second major world power today to extend official recognition to the new Hebrew state of Israel. The United States announced recognition of Israel last week, only ! minutes after the new state came ! into existence. Guatemala followed : the United States. I Russian Foreign Minister V. M. Volotov sent a note last night to Moshe Shertok. foreign minister of Israel s provisional government, saying: V MTM WA8IJCK '- ., 1 An automatic electric execution er of flies, gnats and other small Insects, eliminating the need for sprays, has been devised for use, especially in dairies and bakeries. To Buy, Sell or Trade It pays to read Herald and News Classified Ads it pays to Advertise! Khorassan Members To Be Honored SEATTLE, May 18 iPy National and district officers of the Dramatic Order, Knights of Khora&san. an affiliate of the Knights of Pythias, will be honored at a ceremonial here Friday. Guests at the meeting Include Frank D. Sheppard of Cedar Rapids, la., Imperial prince, and Guy John son, district deputy imperial prince, Pendleton. Ore. Ray D. Green, grand chancellor of the Knights of Pyth ias, Ellensberg, also will attend. Odessa Man To ' Head Students TACOMA, May 18 iP eVrn Fink. Odessa, will head the Associated Students of Pacific Lutheran college during the school year opening next fall. Other officers named yesterday are: Howard Larson, Portland, vice president: Charlotte Mykland. Lssa quah, secretary, and Donald Peder son. Bend. Ore., treasurer. Edna Haglund, Anacortes, was elected president of the Associated Women Students. of Lester Lumpkin, 3647 Shasta way. Allen Frlberg. 15-month-old son of R. C. Frlberg. was admitted for treatment at 6:45 p. m. Satur day for an extremely painful in Jury to the groin received in i fall at his home. His condition was said Improved today. Late Saturday night L. L. Cheyne. Klamath rancher at route 1 box 873, wound up the day's work by arriving at the hospital at 11:30 p.m. for treatment of in jury to both eyes. He was also dis- ! missed after steel was removed. On Sunday. David Karl. 14. was brought to Hillside for leg hurts. David, son of Enoch Karl of route 3. had fallen from a tractor and the machine moved over his leg causing a 16-inch laceration' which required surgery. The accident oc curred late In the afternoon. David was admitted at 6 pm. Shortly after the Karl accident. Albert Denton, well known Fort Klamath rancher, was given emer gency treatment for severe lacera tion of the left band. This was at 6:45 p. m. Egyptians Warn On Arms Shipments CAIRO, May 18 UPt The Egyptian government warned today that it "cannot tolerate" delivery of muni tions and war supplies to Zionists in Palestine. Continued attempts to do so may prove dangerous, it said. A statement by the defense min istry, copies of which it said were sent to all powers, reported that ships carrying war equipment and munitions for "Zionist terrorists gangs" still are arriving at Pales tine ports and warned "all con cerned of the dangers Involved. COMING SOON ESQUIRE Boy Without A Country I mm iV o4 w H""i7 V I I L jl H.Mi E lZ.JLr m.fo l ' , y UTCH HUMt fTV t 1, , - U Boommen Go Back On Jobs Again LONGVIEW, Wash.. May 18 IIP: The giant Weyerhauser and Long-Bell sawmills, idle for five weeks due to a strike of about 100 boommen. resumed operations Mon day morning. The return to work means Jobs again for approximately 3000 saw mill workers and 2200 workers In other fields who had been Idled due to the dispute. Both mills reported that a num ber of employes had left the com munlty, with one firm saying it was about 150 men short when work began. There were Job applicants on hand, however, according to one personnel department emplove, so replacements were to be made. "I want my boy to be an American," said Mrs. RonJa Bromberger, 23. as she arrived at San Francisco aboard the 88 Gen. Gordon with her Z-day-old "stateless" son born between Honolulu and the U. 8. The parents fled nail Germany In 1939, met In Shanghai and were wed two years ago. Parents are being aided by the Hebrew Immigrant Aid society and hope to become cltlsens. "ARROW SHIRTS NEW SPRING SHIPMENTS OF COLORED SHIRTS by ARROW MANHATTAN Grand new patterns and choice of new collar styles. $3.50 - $6.00 Sine 1911- J MANSTORI- 711 Main FASHION PARK. Later Mrs. Ivan Doak of Chllo quin. wife of a loxglng contractor, was given treatment for chest In juries. Mrs. Doak had gone to the corral to call her husband to din ner when a cow took after her and knocked her against the corrul railing. Her condition was said good today. Doak was branding cattle at the time ol the Incident. At Klamath Valley huapital. physicians said Forrest Everhart was improving fallowing his mir aculous escape from drath. Ever hart. In his late 40's. was bounced off a drill while drilling grain on the Hooper ranch at Tulrlake late Friday. The machine passed over his body but Everhart escaped with a partially crushed chest. Internal Injurlrs and facial abrasions. Atom Tests At Eniwetok Successful WASHINGTON. May 18 Ml The While House said Monday that teals Involving three atumlo weapons of improved design proved successful In all respects recently al rinlwrluk atull In the I'arillr. The statement was made as the atomic energy cummlMtnii gave President Truman an olik lal reiKirt saying the results "Imltcata very substantial progress. " Chairman David K. Lilirnlhal and the four other commissioners re portrd orally to Mr. Truman that the "preaent stage of the commis sion's tests of atomic weapons Is now concluded. t.llienthal culled the teats "a mile stone In atomic development." Tiie White House statement about the report said In part: Teals (iood "The commission reported that that tests involving three alomio weapons, each of Improved design, was successful In all respects, and that the results Indicate very sub stantial progress. The president gave general approval ol commission plans tor steps It proposed to Initiate al once for further nuclear develop, j mrnt. Dosed uiki liilormation gained from the teats. As previously announced by tin WHY WE SAY h IU,4 I V.. GLADIOLUS " i Tills flower lias as ila name m ! Jit In orl niruniiig u iimll twonl." Thia ftrrnia incmigrtioiit n a nnmo tof so fy beautiful Momoiii 1 lir Irrm, how ever, flora no! reler lo liir I1I00111 urn la the nvirl-.uMl l ur of the plunl. ruirniiiitftlon, the trU wrr condurl rd under the wurity pravUluitk of the alomio rnrrgy art. and Infor mation aa lo the iu)riiti(lc rrsulta and trchnlral details of lite trata cannot b made public al IhU time. The area of th pruritic ground, as previously defined, remains closed to unauthorlied penMjiis." Uhcnthnl said the big Joint tak force No. 7 will mum to Honolulu home time tomorrow. There may be statement from Honolulu then, from Lt. Urn. John K. Hull, commander of the Ulc I I itirce, ana irom opi. jnmes 9, KtLwii, test airevtor who is in tne commiMlon military application dtvl&iou. l.llientlial suid. About 10.000 men were Involved In the tent, tncludlnt military per sonnel, engineers, aclentuu and others. Fire Razes Lumber Yard (luring the two-hour battle with the blare yesterday. Three alarms brought 14 fire com panies ft urn 1 Angeles. Vernon and lliiiillugtiiii Park and molt than im lirriiirn to the scent). The Ulne may have hern stnrtrd iams Ani.ir.i,ri, way io iii-nre.uy a iirliug. uffiiials said. wtiich roared through the nine-acre lumberyard of E. J. Hlaninn and Son Lumber company resulted In lavs estimated by company officials Monday at I7M.000. Plve firemen and one civilian were overcome or Injured, none serluualy. To Bijy, Sell or Trade It pays to read Herald and News Classified Ads it pays to Advertise! 15 iimjtiiiiLij Eleven recently ronstruiird IuiAy brr slirds, nuinrroiis piles of lumber and three Moiillirm I'arilic Kail road boxiars loaded with planking were destroyed. Daily. ff SYSTEM ff ,ie till I lit He ekly Muiiihly Hales A. L A. tl Ss lr fl ur. FALLS APPLIANCE AND TIKE Nf'.KVtt'r I lib a .Main fh. 77 Amia shop Just Received! 74 Spring and Graduation Type If Y4 Dresses B99 They'll win plaudits after groduofion, too . . the variatila frocks in our pro-com-moncemonf showing! Latest stylos. Mony models. Butcher linen, crepes, cottons, prints and piquet, Sizes 9 to 15, 10 la 20 and 18'2 to 24 Vtl Just Say "Charge It" at Anita's! Use our new, convenient BUDGET CHARGE ACCOUNT. Use our 30-Day Charge Account. Use our Convenient LAY-AWAY PLAN. Also New Shipment of Maternity Dresses 8lirs t to 20 lllsHOP 707 MAIN 1.