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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1941)
PAGE TWO TTTF TCFWS ANT THE NFRAT.P. Kt.AMATH FAI.T.S. ORFCOV May B. 1f4t OF T (Continued from Page One) U. S. war aid fails to reach Britain. "We'd have to face seapower immeasurably superior to our own." he declared. "In this event wed have to protect the entire western world with the U. S. fleet by itself acainst the victorious navy of Germany, Italy and France." He did not elaborate on his remark regarding the French navy but observers saw it as a tacit admission the first from a high administration official that there is a real danger of the French fleet falling into German hands. He added that simultaneously the fleet would have to guard against Japan in the Pacific. Lord Halifax confined his own remarks to matters affecting the booksellers, then read a mes sage from British Prime Minis ter Winston Churchill Churchill said: "Your calling has been well described as a mighty power of spirit in word. This power has been taken away from many na tions by the nazi tyrants. Not easily will it be taken from the English-speaking peoples w h o from writers living and dead gather courage and constancy to strengthen us in trials that we must undergo. "When the minds of nations can be cowed by the will of one man. civilization is broken irre parably. "You who have measured the strength of the nazi conspiracy against the world need no re-1 minder that the means by which j nations are raised to greatness are the virtues bred by freedom of speech and writing. "A one-man state is no state; it is an enslavement of the soul. Last Times Tonight! Show 7 and 9 P. M. HIT NO. J It's Human! It's Mull If Sumy! James Stewart Margaret Sullivan la "SHOP AROUND THE CORNER" 7MY- HIT NO. 2 - suit I G. Robinson "A SLIGHT CASE OF MURDER" Latest World News Events BRTAINMU5 Plays Sat Midnite Show Only Door. Open 11:45 P. M. Show Start, at Midnit. BIG DOUBLE TERROR SHOW BE LA LUGOSI in "DRACULA" MAKE UP A MIDNITE SPOOK PARTY LAST TIMES TODAY ' fUjA Er.ning. - jfc V Jff ' the mind. the body of mankind The brute will of Germany! fleeting dictator has exiled or imprisoned the best of his writers. "This remorseless despot now complains against free American writers. Their fault is that they stand for a free way of life. It is a life that is death to meteoric I tyrant. So be it, and so it will be.'" (Continued from Page One) winch Liverpool is the industrial capital was subjected to its seventh consecutive night of aer ial bombardment. Both the Mcr- seyside and the northwest town rocked for several hours under the explosions of bombs and de fensive guns. Incendiaries rained on the stricken towns by the thousands. ibut authorities said fire-fighters , soon had the situation in hand The German air force carried iout widespread but light raids on other sections of the British Isles. BCRM' Miv 1 inrmin'Gin. Sir Archibald Wavell's , air raiders pressed their drive to choke off Britain s overseas sup- j plies with attacks not only on ships but also on ports and ship building yards, the high com mand reported today of over night air operation. "Very strong air force combat : formations last night again made , fierce attacks on wharves, arm J ment plants and suodIv facilities I in Clyde harbors," the communi- j que said. I 'A large number of explosives and incendiaries wrought havoc primarily on shipbuilding cen ters around Glasgow Further successful air raids were direct ed against the port and wharf facilities of Liverpool. New- castle. Plymouth and other har- bora of the British south ana , southeast coast." , (Continued from Page One) taken prisoners In action while Iraq casualties so far totaled about 1000). Besides breaking the Iraqis' : encircling front at Habbamyah on the fifth day of siege, the British reported they had wrest ed control of the :,. . 1 Haifa oil nirw1in from iha (PMna I of Rashid All Al Canard The general headquarters com munique reported that Iraq troops under the British colors helped in the assault on a plat eau from which anti British Iraqis had been lobbing shells into the British base. In the Libyan fighting around beleaguered Tobruk. the British claimed . successful attack on axis posts, but said operations again were hampered by severe sandstorm. fe ll Thrills! Chills! Terrifying ! A thrilling espionage story "SECRET AGENT" BRITONS GIVE LEADER VOTE E (Continued From Page One) that he has not declared war on them long ago." Other highlights of Churchill's DFCONFIQENG speech to commons; ment to set up a centralized con. 1 Great Britain condoned ac- trol over issuance of visns to tion by Turkey in permitting 1 aliens. The committee acted at German trooDshms to nas ter Assistant SeerttMi.v nr Kiul,. through the Dardanelles for nan j stMure of the Greek Aegean islands because Turkey could not have opposed the German move- ment "without abandoning her neutrality." 2 Hitler's conquests have been compared to those of Na poleon and "maybe Spain and Russia will shortly furnish new chapters to that theme" an im plied warning of a possible nan attack on Russia. 3 The Suez canal will be "de- fended to the end as well as I Malta. Crete and Tobruk. and ! Near Eastern forces .now number nearlv 500.000 men. 4 The German "pamer" forces which have driven across ' Liova ana inio tgypi. annougn not much larger than the British 1 forces, were able to make their 1 lightning drive because "tactical mistakes were committed, miss- ed chances occurred and our , armored force became disorgan- ata. 5 The flow of aid from the United States probably will en-1 able Britain to maintain herlmaman registry, probably will minimum essential sea traffic in 1941 and "as for 1942 we must! look for an immense construction ' of merchant ships by the united : States . . . already in full swing. I . - This should see us through ( 0 mere is danger mat uer- , many may intervene in Iraq be-1 fore Britain can crush the revolt 1 ' there and safeguard the vital oil supplies but Britain is deter. mined to crush Iraq' pro-nazi premier. Rashid All Beg Gailani. Courthouse Records WEDNESDAY Complaints Filed Erna Decker, by guardian ad 1 litem, Mrs. A. E. Dallman versus ! Edwin Decker. Suit for annul- declared incap-lwill ment. Plaintiff able of assenting to marriage with defendant for want of legal aSe. She became 17 years of age .DCm!!!L1.0, JL ' coll, attorney for plaintiff. I Herbert W. Bukcr versus .Mary May Buker. Suit for di- j vorce. Couple married in Cali fornia November 3, 1921. Deser tion charged. F. O. Small, attor ney for plaintiff. Phyllis I. Murray versus. r'f 'r, " " L . V" I kane. Wash., July 1, 1939. Plain tiff charges defendant with cruel and inhuman treatment and 1 asks restoration of her maiden name. Phyllis I. Lindstrom. J. C. O'Neill, attorney for plaintiff. Order for Dismissal Big Basin Lumber company versus George W. McAnulty and Emma May McAnulty and M. J. Zupan and Ethel Zupan. Case settled out of court. Dismissed with prejudice. Sentence State of Oregon versus George Edwin Blackmore. Defendant found guilty of larceny. Sen tenced to five years in Oregon penitentiary. Justice Court Elmer Earl Harding, no opera tor's license. Fined $5.50. Joseph Johnson, driving under influence of Intoxicating liquor. Fined 5100 and 10 days in jail. Committed for 60 days. John Ravenello. drunk on a public highway. Fined S10 or five days. Committed to county jail. Meeting The regular meeting of IWA auxiliary was to be held in the IWA hall Wednesday at r.iis p. m. LAST TIMES TODAY u. s. pursues (Continued From race Onci German agency no longer had the status under which they en ! tered this country under a U. German commerce treaty. 3 Jackson clamped more 'rigid regulations on admission and deportation of alien seamen. The house appropriations committee approved a $241,000 ' fund to enable the state depart I llreckinndge Long reported that t the state department had infor mation "regarding the known activities of certain foreign gov ernmenui 111 endeavoring to In j troduce agents into the I'm ted States in the guise of visitors, i immigrants or seamen." "Great Danger" Shortly after the seamen had been rounded up. Jackson told ; the American Judicature society the totalitarian form of "non military invasion" is the "great- est danger to American free dom." H e urged enactment of pending legislation to oermit i federal agents to tap wire of SDles and saboteurs. aortiiir "the wires of America today arc protected communications sys- tern ior me enemies of Amer- ica " Arrests of the German seamen was made on grounds thev had overstayed their 80-day leaves in ' this country. The sailors, former crew members of Standard Oil company ot rew jersey tankers who had been laid off when the vessels were transferred to I'ana be sent to western camp. About 120 of the German sailors arrested today were seized in the New York area Others were picked up at Chi-' cago, San Francisco. Miami. I rwansa v.uy, wusKcriown. i-a . i ana jersey city, uayonne ano I Newark, N. J. Commencement Timo Near for Klamath County Schools fContlnued from Page One) , board of higher ccucatlon. as I speaker. Plans are being made (or exercises at 1 1 a. m. at Roosc- velt school. Pelican school heads have not set the time nor named ' the speaker for exercises which , also be held May 22. At 1 Mills school eighth grade di- plomas will be presented at 9 a. m. with Superintendent J. 1 CC" Wcl'SaS ",c lpC.".kt'r' C"' ating class at Fairview school at 1 p. m.. and at Fremont school exercises will be held at 2 p. m. with George P. Davis as the speaker. I rouuwuig is me scneouie ior Oregon Winter Sports associa Klamath county high schools: tion last night elected Lynn Bonanza. May 15. L. Orth Sisc- : Parcy. Portland, its president. I.V:.;oJi:;:ili;:j.llH Corner Washburn Way and South Sixth Street Shows at 7:00 and 9:00. P. M. PLAYS FRIDAY and SATURDAY HIT NO. 1 WOW.' IT'S MORE THRILLING THAN EVER! Giving you the Screen Thrill of a Lifetime! . . . See Britain's Fomous Royal Air Force in Action! y LIUIVls M LI IN Til IT 1MV1HHM BASIL RATH BONE O-s DAVID NIVEN A DONALD CRISP HIT NO. 2 A TOP-NOTCH p .rMt.-Mt' ' v II ..... 4M AVALANCHE Of ACTION! JDHIISIY MACK 'Briroin-Con't-Win' Stand Attacked By Willkie tCoiitiiiucd hum Page One) It i our Job to supply the planes. Ihen bngl.ind will have super- 1 ,or'',y1'l . ! "'"'" rejected as a "cow ardly doctrine, uuworthv of our past." the suggestion that the I' nlted States is "weak and un prepared " or that "the llrilish are bound to fall and that our hope lies in looking behind our own defense while freedom col lufiscs all about us.' Willkiu said that if we Insure delivery of the ever increasing pioduction of American factories and farms to England, "England ! v'"u"'t only survive, she will ' "'And Personally," he said, "I al" "ol '""'rested lit mere words and technical phrases, 1 rare not whether you call sate delivery 'Convoying, ualroling, airplane accompaniment, or what not. We want those cargoes protected and al once and with less talk and more action. ! "Furnish to Britain todav and tomorrow and the next day, fur her desperate need, ships the ships in our docks, the ship in our coastwise trade until it hurts, the impounded ship of other nations, the shis we are i ' buimlng. ' "Give her destroyers. and ee j j those ships, loaded with i l.,u,lu,,l,.i,ul ! American factories and farms. nvrr tneir cargoes safely to P,r,-', "' western and north- rrn England. Thus England will survive." more, district attorney, speaker; Keno, May 15. Ted Medford, Klamath Falls businessman, speaker: Bly. May 15, Merrill, May 15, Malcolm Epley. manag ing editor of The Herald and News, speaker: Maliu. May 15. Rev. Eugene V. Ilaynes. pastor of the Community Congregation. al church, speaker; Henley. May m, Martin Swanson, insurance man, speaker- Sprague Itivor May 14. J The commencement address at ' Sacred Heart academy will be ' delivered by the Itev. Father I Gaire at 7:30 p m. Friday. May I 23 in Sacred Heart church, di plomas will he presented by the ! i Rev. Father Timothy Casey. i Eagles Auxiliary The Eagle auxiliary will meet Thursday at 8 p. m. in the Eagle hall. The drill team is urged to be present 1 ,. ,, , """"" , ," dr'"' A P"1" "l'l' ' be , nra,Tr ivr, . Mabol Zedwick of" CorvaliT. ol" , came president of the Oregon department of the woman's re lief corps, GAR auxiliary, last : night. PORTLAND Mv 7 t.V Th FIRST RUN FEATURE range ni htt cronln' ikJ wirh lix-gwntl1 (lur thotvii At liN f 3 1 H s I! wan sr "A .f, Hill nnitv HITS LABOR LEADER SEATTLE. May T (,T1 II P Mclnikow, of Sim Francisco, di rector of the Pacific coast labor bureau who was refused admit lance to Canada on his arrival at Vancouver, U. C, yesterday, said on hi return here he had document to prove he had been a cttlton of the United States many year. (Pre dispatehe from Van couver quoted Fred W, Taylor, district superintendent of Immi gration, as laying that Mclnikow "was not sure of Ilia United State citliciuhip") Mclnikow said he had been a cltlien since 1004 and had voted many years. II aald he was told at Vancouver that as lie did not represent an Internation al union he would not be per mitted to appear before locul too latFto classify FOR SALE Good paying hotel. Priced reasonably for quirk ale. Phone 6731. l) FURNISHED-APARTMENT In duplex, close In. Phone 57611 3 8 WANTED Housekeeper, small family. Good wages. Inquire 410 Owens. JUS FOR RENT 4 room furnished apt., 505t Jefferson Can be seen between 10 a. m and 6 P m. No children or pets. 58 GLADIOLI I1ULBS 15c dozen, $1 00 per 100. Anderson's. 3119 North Ulh. 3.7 THREE ROOM furnished house; also four rooms unfurnished 710 Lowell. 5 7 THE INTERSTATE BUSINESS COLLEGE offers special course in CIVIL SERVICE and for secretarial work in army and navy. 5 7 RANCH and construction exper ience, some selling and tractor operator. Have panel delivery Henry Zentner. 321 Oak. SB, On the Stage! FRIDAY and SATURDAY Matin at 2 P. M. Evening Show at 7 and I Saturday Continuous Shows From 12 Noon A glittering living, animated cavalcade of the Musical Comedy, Vaudeville. Minstrel and Concert Stage. To Song Hit and Entertainment of 1941 combined with th Melodies and Stage Triumphs of the Past Recreated anew by a famous company of Singer. Instrumentalists, Comedians and Dancer. STARRING IS 41 Iwrrl RADIO Frank Dobson Leo Leonard Louise Stone Th Pianofiendi union there. He went north to appear before an arbitration hoard hearing a dispute between the British Columbia Mt'Ctrle Hallway company and It em ployes. He returned here on the air liner on which he flew to Van couver. Looking (in (tumulus? Tun to the Classified page - Met ..OH L 7.7 va 1 - u 'I s f'tt ' ' M- V.V .r. 1 r. Plus: "Unusual Occupations" Paragraphia Cartoen Naws V. STARTS M I Air Condition!! THE 'The E.rly I C 2 A ., Bird Gets X . r V the Worm." I .jV k. r "Who wn - J I U l a Worm Jl I 4 a Anyway?" f w r J I TWO BLACK CROWS GEORGE MORAN Abetted by EDDIE MACK A CENTINNIM. MVUt Of 1H! mationi wmw ekthltai twt mt I A all . LfflEBIC0ll:J MURDE: Or THE MUSICAL STAGE A CAST OF FAMOUS ARTISTS of O STAGE O FEATURING Bobby & Betty Lea George Stcclo Nclla Burke Claude do Carr ON THE SCREEN rv.jjj V ,,',,''','',li','",',',',r ! jljl&tfbr? Jj STRATTONPORTER I WHllW iMMi COLD WEATHER I POHTLANI), May 7 (IV tlniird cold weather and tc I cantonal ruin wua forecast for I Oregon Thursday by the wratlf ' er bureau hero. Kain cloud threatened yesterday but yield ed little precipitation. At the present, the United States has 20.000 pluurl other than alrllno craft. O SUNDAY For You. Moollk SCREEN Patricia Paul Carlin O'Dare Laura Honell Hollywood Debutantes j gV1 1 ' I :