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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1941)
PAGE FOUR THE NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON April IB. 1B4t tbe klaiath News KI-AMATH NEWS PUBLISHING CO, FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM CP LEY Published very morning Raw Publishing Company at atn r 1111, urecon Represented WEST HOLLIDA Y CO, Inc. Seattle, uoa Angeles, St Louis, B C Copies of Tba Newt and Information about tha Klamath tor tha asking at any of these Entered as second class matter at tha post office at Klamath Falls. Oregon. November IS. Member Audit Bureau Circulation Masimriox miss aifwi r cui tuuit ru ua tuwu (hh pisrt onw pet yr . pmfl Baa. f mn . Mint kr , S a . SKrtp m Weekend IN world shocked by hatreds and mass bloodshed, the faithful will pause on Sunday. Easter day, with the thought that if the words of the Man of Peace had been heeded, "this all would not have been." The beautiful story of Easter, the story of Christ triumphant, carries hope for in this historic year of 1941. and pageant and sermon in America, and in our own Midland Empire churches, the preparations have been in keeping: with the great signific ance of the day. Those who go to church ' St Matthew's story of the first Easter runs like this: "In the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary to see the sepulchre. "Anc behold, there was angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone from the door and sat upon it "Bis" countenance was like lightning, and raiment white as snow. And for fear of him the keepers did shake. and became as dead men. not yc ; for 1 know that ye seek Jesus, which was crucified. ' "He is not here: for he is risen, as he said . . ." Read it again, before turning to the depressing news of the day.' - Information from the Balkans as this is written con tinues on a disturbing key. The German advance has moved with new success, and axis and British troops are reportedly engaged in a huge struggle in the Phlorina area of Greece. Yugoslav resistance appears to be rapidly col lapsing. There is nothing in the situation, insofar as it has been told in the news, that is encouraging to those in sympathy with the allies. Meanwhile, along the same line, runs a story that the Br'ish have lost much that they gained in their recent brilliant African campaign against the Italians. It is possible a major battle is in the making there, also. None of. it makes pleasant reading. : The Russian mystery thickens, if that is possible. . ' Yugoslavia's premier was reported on a mission of some kind to Moscow. Moscow's military organ, the Red Star, recently made some favorable comment on Yugo slavia's icourage, and it is remembered that Russia and Yugoslavia signed a non-aggression pact just before the recent hostilities broke out ' : But ;let's remain skeptical about any possibility of Russian, help for Yugoslavia. The Russian Bear hkimt 1 - . bhu a any disposition yei to Bestir, himself by anyone being over-run by the German machine. And the time to help Yugoslavia already is slipping speedily into the past M. E. Pinochle Party The Weyer-Jsold TSllXSTUi : party April 18 at 1:30 p. m. in the Tommunity hall. Mrs. Jack Chapman and Mrs. James Knight will be hostesses. The public is invited. First Show The matinee to be given Sunday, April 21. of tne uire-act comedy. The w noie Towns Talking." will be a regular performance and not a dress rehearsal accoiding to an- nouncement made Saturday by members of St. Marys Dramatic club, presenting the play. Tickets Guess Acain 3W Transformed tnto FDR by makeup is Esther Van Wagoner Tufty, during dress rehearsal for National Press Club women's dinner-play in Washington, Publishers Editor Managing Editor except Monday by The Klamath Esplanada and Pine streets, KJam- nationally by San Francisco, New York. Detroit. Portland. Chicago, Vaneouvar, Herald together with coraplata Falia market may ba obtained office 1933. under act of March S, 1879 Telephone 3114 rrM a, ijnm Roundup the distressed and troubled It will be re-told in sons thousands of churches over on Easter will profit by it a great earthquake: for the And the angel answered, fear . .... . for the play may be used t either the matinee or reguUr j nerfo. rkiM I especially urged to take ad- vantage of the Sunday matinee, j j Portland Mr. and Mrs. Gus ' J. Scherr and three chiMren of I Portland, are visitine at th. home of Mrs. Scherz' mother. 1 Mrs. Jennie G rover Mr. and Mrs. Scherz are former residents 01 Kiamath Falls. Mills PTA There will be an executive meeting of the Mills PTA at 1J0 pi. WednesdaV Anril l All ,h,.,irT urged to be present. Leave Hospital Andrew Ortis. your.g son of Mrs Ernes tine Ortis and Mrs. Mary Owens, all injured in an automobile crash this week, left Klamath Valley lospiul for homes at Pelican Bay Camp Friday after noon. Returns Home Mrs. George Miser ana infant daughter, born April 3 at Klamath Valley hos pital, returned home to Keno oaturdaT afternoon. Car Stolen Runell Rirklao Sprague River, reported to city police the theft of his car from Eighth street and Klamath ave nue at noon Saturday. Police Court Tn,rn drunks, three vags, and eight traffic tickets made up the po- uv tuun report Saturday morn ing. f CherlieV f Chaplin I "THE CREAT 1 1 DICTATOR- I Esquire Sua. J rmw j. rj 1 V rM. fMWMffl' News Be THFft WASHINGTON. April 12 The Vaniir IU1UIU 1C A X VIWl I'll Slav army upon precisely the are supposed to hammer down same tnck which fooled the their adversaries with brute French. The very same nad ; force, are far from supernatu army crowd which knifed I ral. The nazis have used their throcgh Sedan and severed the French armies, handled the Job. The mechanized units which pushed throcga the impregnable passes on the Bulgarian border were directly tinder General Von Kleist who saged the sur prise at the French Ardennes with approximately the same units. They got throcgh the Impass able passes simply by forcing vmx the most impassable first. Here was a defile so narrow tanks ouM no Ps- Appreciating this, the Yugoslavs left it pro tected by a very small force. The nazis conquered the isolat ed spot easily and slipped through motorcycle units in sin gle file. On the other mountains these side of the joined with parachute troops to take the! strongly defended neighboring , P from their undefended rear. Within 24 hours the larg jmwrt uu uiu una ukucu up and the tanks were stream- ing down across the sparsely manned southern half of the country. All this while the buUt Yugoslav army was in the north carrying out a care- fuU'r Prepared defense plan Iouna on supponuons enci- 7 reverse oi wnat tne uer- mans did. The Yugoslavs figured their unfortified border with Ru mania would naturally be at- . ,T V !Ucked T " weakness. They planned HOLD EVERYTHING mimaaitt.milMi y.r7 'Just think only 9.364.157 more payments and they're , ours ! April, 1941 to give way slowly and fall back upon their strong defense line in the mountains to the southwest But by the time they were ready for this the mech anized nazi scissors had already cut their southern communica- tions and rail lines. They were doomed. STUPIDITY BLAMED As the detailed stories of these German successes come out. months after the event, it becomes clear that the mech anized German monsters that wits more than their fists. The only thing unconquerable about them has been the stupidity of their opponents. SEDAN EXPLAINED Now comes the first authentic details of what happened at Se dan in a study by Capt Paul Thompson, VS-A. (April "Infan try Journal, circulated in the military trade). He looked into German, French and Swiss ac counts and found no evidence of FrtTfh treason or irresistihlc German power but an amazing amount of French miscalcula tion! Like the Yugoslavs with thnr passes, the French thought that the Ardennes Hiiljr forest te; rain offered insurmobntabU ob- stades for meclian-sed units They only had their horse sv airy on the Job to defend it back to the line of the Meuse river. The Germans slaughtered the horse units in small com bats near the Luxembourg bor der and arrived, otherwise un opposed, at the Meuse river' three days after the invasion ' started j Tne French Ninth army was to defend the Meuse, but its or-; ders required five dayj to get t irmv 1 1 n trt lnj rUf,ntn tin ' Conseqtw-ntly the G-rmans were on the east bank before the French had manned the west bank. The French did not sell out The bridges were blown up. but with the west bank only de fended in spots, the Cermans forded In ruboer boats ana set up pontoon bridges. They were able to take some of the French defensive positions from the rear. To colossal ire this otherwise, stupendous French inefficiency. ( the tanks of the Ninth army, finally arrived somewhat off the scene of battle on the fifth day . (they had been misdirected). Thereupon they promptly ran out of gas. The tanks were abandoned and seized by the Germans without a shot. Only a few French aircraft appeared in this "impregnable" tone. German dive bombers ap peared on the second day. but there was really not much fight ing to be done. The main French forces were off to the north where they expected the main blow. The Germans did not even have time to bnng up their own artillery. Their suc cess was far greater than their most optimistic calculations. After the breakthrough, all was lost for the British and French. SPY WORK Root secret of these suc cesses was superior advance spy work. German tourists had gone over the ground in detail. The Germans knew what spots were defended and how strongly. They shrewdly spied out the soft spot and contrived mechan ical means to use it. What authorities here now would like to know is whether Britain has overlooked any thing. For Your Information tit m innan ii MM SIM WEATHER NORTHERN CALIFORNIA Fair tonight and Sunday mild , temperature; fresh northerly wind off coast strong at times, decreasing Sunday WASHINGTON AND ORE GON Fair tonight and Sunday except cloudy with occasional drizzle extreme north Washing' ington coast mild temperature. gentle, variable wind off the coast except moderate westerly near Taioosh tacking to south' westerly Sunday; gentle north west wind over inland waters of Washington. Mai Closing Times (Trains) Southbound: 6:00 a m. Northbound: 0:30 a m. Southbound: 5:15 p m. Northbound: 8:30 p m. (Stages) Alturas, L k e i e w. Rocky Point and Ashland, all doss 7:00 a- m. , . Masonic Meeting A stated communication of Klimath lodge No. 77 AF and AM will be held Monday evening. Leo Huls will speak on the subject "Philo sophical Ways of Living." A lodge of Fellowcraft will con vene at 7 p. m. Monday for de gree work. There are now about 8.000.000 automobile radios in the United States, or about 27 per cent of the total number of radio-eauin- ped homes. ANDERSON GOES ON TRIAL HERE EARLY MONDAY Names of 12 additional ven iremen were drawn Saturday in preparation for tha opening Monday of the trial of James Quenun Anderson, young part Indian charged with first de gree murder in the death of Jerry Zulkoski on January 23. It Is expected most or all of Monday will be required to ob tain a Jury in tha case, second murder trial here since Circuit Judge David R. Vandenberg as sumed office. The new veniremen are Fred C. Bamber. Will Humphrey, Huntington Taylor. J. W. Dolan, Frank L. Uhrtne. Robert Odell, Ralph Hill and Rolland K. King, all of Klamath Falls; Charles Hodges, Merrill; James N e w n h a m. Olene; Ralph Puckett. Keno: Stewart Nichol son, Fort Klamath. Dayton E. Van Vector will act as special deputy district attor ney in charge of the prosecu tion of Anderson. The young defendant will be represented by J. C. O'Neill and E. E. Oris- coll. Zulkoski's body was found be side the Lakiview highway near Oiene on the morning of Janu ary 23. Later. Shrriff Uoyd Low arrested young Anderson at the home of his father. O. T. (Buck) Anderson, near Beatty. Zulkoski was a white man who bad been employed at the Anderson place. His recent per-1 manent home was in Ord, Nebr. It is anticipated that self-de fense will be featured in the effort of counsel to prevent con-1 viction of young Anderson, rho has assertedly admitted tie was with Zulkoski in a truck at the time the former Nebraskan was shot. I From .Other Editors MUSIC FOR KIWANIt (Bend Bulletin) It was a successful conference held here by Kiwanis under the direction of its able lieutenant governor. Phil Hitchcock, but let us remark that, as far as the evening session at the Pilot Butte Inn was concerned, the school musicians of Bend and Klamath Falls, who appeared on the program last night "stole the show." Klamath's young trumpeters played extremely difficult selections, and played them well Bend s capella choir we believe to be one of the outstanding musical organiza tions of tha northwest. We may have said something of the sort before and it may be that ws have not taken In enough terri tory when we said it. It is suf ficient to mention now that the choir was at its best last night, and that its performance was en hanced by the obligate played by a talented young cornetist. Earl Mosen, in one of the num bers, as well as by the solo parts taken by Betty Joe Rogers. Bend is proud of its high school musicians and of Homer Waltz, the man who has devel oped them as an organization And. we imagine, Klamath Falls feels much the same way in re gard toward Its musical director, Charles Stanfield, and tha boys and girls whom he Instructs. German Figures On Capture Disputed LONDON. April 12 (AP) Reuters (British) news agency reported from Athens today a statement by a semi-official Athens news agency branding as "most exaggerated reports that the number of Greek troops cut off and captured east of the Vardar river exceeded 80,000. "Greek forces in this area were much smaller than this, and. furthermore, thousands of them were able to withdraw In time and reach free Greek ter ritory," the report said. Scour Drive $665 Short Of Quota Boy Scout headquarters Sat urday announced they were still $665 short of their goal In the now-aging third annual Boy Scout-Girl Scout-C amp Fire Girls fund financing drive. A total of $5200 in cash and pledges has been turned Into the office since inauguration ol tha campaign March 26. All volunteer workers who have not turned In their cards were urgently requested to clean up their work at the earliest possible time. LEGAL NOTICES SUMMONS FOR PUBLICA TION No. 6031 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON SIDE GLANCES "That's liis wife on the phone he- calls hint up every half hour to find out what's new 1" FOR KLAMATH COUNTY. J. W. HERRON, Plaintiff. LOLA M. HERRON. Defendant TO THE ABOVE NAMED DE- 28lh day of April. 1941; If you PENDANT, LOLA M. HER- o appear and answer. RON: plaintiff for want thereof will IN THE NAME OF THE apply to the above entitled court STATE OF OREGON. You rreor the relief prayed for in his hereby required to appear and complaint, to-wlt: answer the complaint filed! (a) For a Decree forever dla against you in the above en- solving the marriage contract titled suit on or before the lait now and heretofore existing be day of four weeks from thejtween plaintiff and defendant, data of tha first publication of i and for such other and further this summons, and, if you fall relief as to the Court may seem so to appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded In his complaint, succinctly stated as follows, to-wlt: That the bonds of matrimony now and heretofore existing be tween plaintiff and defendant be forever dissolved; That plaintiff be granted the permanent custody of plaintiffs and defendant s minor children For such other and further re lief aa to the Court may seem meet and equitable. This summons is published by order of the Honorable David R. Vandenberg. Judge of the Circuit Court of Klamath County, Oregon, made and en tered on the 14th day of March, 14I. The time prescribed for publl cation of this summons is once each week for four consecutive weeks. The date of the first publication of this summons is the 13th day of March. 1941. O. H BENGTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff, Pott Office Address: 128 East Main Street Medford, Oregon. M 13-22 2: A 5-12 No. 46. APPLICATION FOR REGIS TRATION OF MILK CONTAIN' ER BRAND IN THE STATE OF OREGON TO THE SECRETARY OF STATE OF THE STATE OF OREGON, SALEM, OREGON: Klamath Falls Creamery, whose place of business is 1310. 1320 Main street, city of Klam ath Fall, county of Klamath, stata of Oregon, engaged in the business of bottling, selling or distributing of milk products In branded containers within tha state of Oregon, have adopted the following described BRAND. to-wlt: Crater Lake Dairy Products. Crater Lake Dairy. Klamath Falls Creamery, Klamath Falls Cry., or K. F. Creamery, a fac simile of which Is marked "Ex hibit A. hereto attached, such BRAND to be placed upon any bottle, can. carton, crate, or other container used In tha or dinary commercial distribution of milk, cream, skimmed milk. or compound milk drinks or other dairy products by placing such brand upon such container either by printing, engraving. mowing, cutting, carving. em- bossing, impressing, or ui any other manner annexing or at- tachlng the same: and request that such BRAND be filed in the office of the secretary of state of the state of Oregon in accord ance with the provisions of sec tion 41-1002, Oregon Code 1930 KLAMATH FALLS CREAMERY. Glenn Kent President (Seal). Dated April 4. 1941 A 8-12 No 56 SUMMONS Equity No. 6076 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR KLAMATH COUNTY. A. C. HOWELL, Plaintiff. vs. LENORA HOWELL. Defendant. TO: LENORA HOWEI.L. r. fends nt: IN THE NAME " THT STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you In the above entitled court and cause on or before the expiration of four weeks from the dale of tha first publication of this Summons, which data of expiration Is fixed by order of the above entitled Court as the Just and equitable. This Summons Is published by Order of the Honorable David R. Vandenberg. Judge of the above entitled court, made and entered on this 28th day of March, 1041. directing that such publication be made in the Eve ning Herald not less tiun once each week for four consecutive weeks' from the first publication hereof. Date of flrn publication March 29th. 1941. Date of last publication April 26th. 1941. A. W. SCHAUPP. Attorney for Plaintiff. 6134 Main Street, Klamath Falls, Oregon. M 29; A 5-12-19-26. No. 82 Klamath FilK Oregon, April 12. 1941 NOTICE is hereby given that the partnership heretofore and until February I. 1941 existing between C. B. Cassei and M. C. Catsel, doing business at 832 Main street, Klamath Falls. Ore gon, has been terminated and dissolved by M C. Camel leav ing Klamath Falls and no longer helping or participating in tha partnersnlp buiiness of Chiro practic Cilnic. The undersigned will not be responsible for any bills contracted after this date by said partnership or anyone for it but the underilgned. C. B CASSEL. A 12 19. No. 62 EASTER By EARL WHITLOCK A little less than 2000 veara ago. Jesus, the Christ arose trom his tomb, i r spoke to his di sciples, showed them the cruel j wounds in his 1 hands and side. fez and so left proof of the beautiful fact of eternal life. Scientists and I A. students of Oriental lore dispute as to the exact year in which this stupendous event occurred. That is, after all, a matter of small moment, a proper sub ject for the discussions of the ologians. The Important thing is that it DID happen and" that our entire western civilization has been based upon it. Y ur life and mine today are Infin itely different from, infinitely better than the lives we should have led without this firm faith in the Eternal Plan. And the fact that today, sup posedly Christian nations are, cruelly tearing at each others' throats, does not prove Chris, tianity unsound. It merely demonstrates again what has been repeatedly demonstrated before that mankind has not yet developed sufficiently to learn the lessons of kindness, forbearance and brotherly love which Jesus taught. Next week Mr. Whltlock. of the Earl Whltlock Funeral Home, will comment on "A Reputation for Fair Prices."