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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1941)
PAGE TWO THE NEWS AXP THK HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON May 1, 1Q41 U.S.GUARD513 FRENCH SHIPS INHSTPOBTSii cff Etc Jt"p'ik (Continued from rase One) Inter-Island traders. were board ' "d at St, Thomas. Virgin Islands Those In mainland ports were: New York Normandie. 11 de Noirmouticr. Mont Everest. Fort Royal and lie de Ouessant. New Orleans Angoulemc. Michigan. Touraine. San Pedro. Calif. Vanncs and Wisconsin. San Francisco Aleneon. In New York, where 1 0 coastguardsmen went aboard the 83,423-ton Normandie. Cart. , R. W. Dempwolf. -coast guard di-: Millard W. Grubb. illustrious vision commander, said the i potentate of Hillah temple, will , guards were placed aboard the ; preside over the spring cere five French ships in his juris monial at Ashland Saturday. diction "to preserve order." He j May 17. emphasized they had not been seiied or placed in protective;,,. CUM pa v, ns m-r-ii uuiiv nun German, Itclian and Danish ves sels. He said his order also ap plied to any other French ships which might arrive in New York. Reports from other cities where the French vessels are lo cated indicated the coastguards men took over without incident. Non-interventionists original- STARTS SUNDAY O HURRY, HURRY, HURRY! Hop on the circus band-wagon. Ride with these nomads of the night, fighting, loving, hating by their own strange code . . . for getting there may be a tomorrow! vlmmmmrm (T THE I jVX WAGONS Mr life . iii,J.aaassss.1 -&Lm WwM w "meet ths slut musical brevity totlano premier coloa cartoon ooinq places universal news CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 12 NOON Potentate L,; is. : .r nsd pannfA t0 u,e tne Snip bill as a springboard for full dress debate on the convoy ques tion but at the last moment. Sen Charles F. Tobey, (R-N. HA de-' elded to withhold his anti-con- voy amendment In Ashland William Phillips of Klamath Falls is spending a few days in Ashland on business Ploys Tonight and Saturday Big Action Romance Hits Friday Shows at 7:00 and 9:00 P. M Continuous Shows Sat urday From 12 Noon k C-ntf lrtur .,,0 .tain .1. LOW DON ACTS 10 RAO FLIGHTS not oppose the landings after near the aft of the transport thov had received instructions Several marines in the trans from Vichy. 1 P""t sought to pull him back. I but said that the pressure was . . j too great to accomplish i rescue By The Associated Pres. I in th.l manner. LONDON. May 15 i.41 Ger- i Crash boats were stationed in many has moved into Iraq by : the bay by the navy to rescue way of French-mandated Syria, ' Osipoff should he fail. Then the using Syrian airfields for luft- two test pilots took off in the waf (e stopovers, the British gov-1 scout plane after the transport eminent announced today. had circled twice over North At the same lime a prospect j Island and headed out to sea of the French mandate's Involve- west of Point Loma. ment in the struggle over Iraq I After considerable maneuver was cited in a declaration by ing the smaller ship was piloted ! Foreign Secretary Eden that directly underneath the trans j "full authority" had been given port. The propeller of the small ! to untisn forces to attack tier-1 man planes in Syria. Breach of Armistice Eden charged that the transit ' of German planes via Syria was a "clear breach" of the armis ' tice between Germany and France after that British ally , was knocked out of the European ar last June. Iraq, scene of sporadic guer rilla fighting between native forces and the British since May 2. is one of the world's richest oil producers and a route to Brit ain s vital Sues canal. ( In Klamath Lloyd Selby of Apparently Adolf Hitler (per-, Ashland was transacting busi haps through agreement with the , ncss in Klamath Falls Monday. Vichy government) at last had gone to the aid of the Iraquis , against the British, fulfilling the . German statement at the end of the Balkan campaign that only! the first phase of the war in the middle east was over. . Evidence that the Germans had launched a new military ven ture on the hot sands of Asia Minor came today from several sources including a Cairo an nouncement of the middle east' command. Among them were: Courthouse Records THURSDAY Marriage Applications WEAVER BRUMMITT James William Weaver 2 I .Klamath Falls, bus driver, na-' jtive of Wisconsin. Helen G. ' : Brummitt. 26. Klamath Falls. 1 , ....... u. IvDoir.inii r u .a A. Buxton, C. T. Buston and ' r n Hnntlnt Anina K.iir.n.a ! Pacific Pumping company, ver-j sus Frank II. Loosley, doing business as Falls Iron Works. I Suit to collect for pump. Plain- tiff prays Judgment of $311.67 j ALTERATIONS, remodeling, by with interest at 8 per cent from day in your home. 820 Wash April 10, 1940. Goldstein, Gal- ington. 5-17 ton and Galton, attorneys tor plaintiff. Decrees Johnnie Mae Shull versus Leonard O. Shull. Divorce grant ed on grounds of cruel and In-; 11 u 111 t 11 iii-diiueut. i-idiuuii awarded custody of one minor and $25 a month for support of 1 child during minority. Butte Valley State Bank ver sus R. L. Davidson. Plaintiff ' mortgages on property declared prior liens: mortgages foreclosed and sheriff's sale ordered. Harry D. Boivin, attorney for plaintiff. Justice Court Delia Provost, no operator's license. Fined S3 50. T. J. Sheridan, buvinc. sell ing, and dealing in used motor , vehicles without license. War- I rant from district court. Port- Uand. Bond of S1000 filed. James Leonard Blankenship. tf..tu.. ttiiu ua.icry. oona set ai $500 cash or S1000 property. Committed to county Jail. Ralph Henry Stciber, failure to stop at highway intersection. Fined S5.50. Roger Charles Viramontes. no operator's license, also over loading truck and trailer. Fined S20 50. Oscar Martin Heutter, no op erator's license, no tail light. Fined $5.30 on each charge. AIRMEN SUCCESSFUL (Con tinned from Page One) was engaged In routine para chute Jumping, was Involun tary. A cargo parachute releas ed from the plane pulled him out. and his parachute became entangled in the static line cable .-" vm me snruua corns oi the parachute while McCants 1 held Osipoff and pulled him , head first into the plane. With Osipoff s legs dangling over the top of the fuselage of the scout plana Lowrey brought th (.raft In ifmunn nn V.,-tH Is,nd. Osipoff had lost con- sciousness from his position in the seat, but was quickly reviv ed at the naval air station, where an examination indicated an arm fracture was the only 'ser ious injury he received. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED Large local retail firm wants young man to learn business. Prefer high school graduate. Must be neat, ambitious, aggressive and willing to learn. Immed iate salary to start and ex ceptional opportunity for fut ure. Must enjoy selling and meeting public. State age. edu cation, etc. Write Box 4982. INewi Herald. S-17 FOR RENT 4-room house, close in. Apply 133 Mortimer. 886tf FOR SALE whi,e nd enamel ice box 50 lbs., very cheap. 232 Roosevelt. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS everything furnished $4.00. 410 So. 5th. S 21. WANTED Girl rbr housework. Go home nights. 22S So. 3th. 3.18 TRY THAT delicious Chicken Dinner, southern style, at Tower Drive Inn, So. 6th St., opposite Tower theatre. 3-17 SUFFER-Zanol Medical Products cures corns, athlete's foot, sprains, etc. Local refer ence. Treatment free. Ar cade Hotel. 5-13 ' LADY COOKS the best of foods I and service at Tower Drive , Inn. So. 6th St., opposite Tower i theatre. 5-17 j CONVALESCENT HOME Fac I ing park, Ashland. Mrs. Bar ' ber and daughter, Mrs. Harm I sen, in charge. 5-15 BEARING FRUIT TREES, baled. 3 years old, special this week ,or s- Puk Landscape Co.. So. 6th. opposite Tower the- atre. 3-17 FOR SALE 1935 Dodge sedan. Will consider older car part payment. 125 E. Main. 5-21 COMPLETE PLANTING of 10 flowering shrubs, including evergreens. $15 and up. Park Landscape Co., Tower Inn, op-! posite Tower theatre. So. 6th. 517 , Kiddie Kub SATURDAY MORNING AT 10 A. M. A BIG SURPRISE r TREAT! Courtesy of m J Lost Hirer Dairy W Another Big ' I Stage Show! I ON THE SCREEN l "THE MYSTERIOUS ; N RIDER" I DOORS SPIN AT l:tt A. M. SHOW STARTS AT ff NS A. M. SIXTH STREET ' (Continued from Page One) north, between Klamath Falls 1 and Algoma. I The present grading contract there leaves the old highway at : Terminal city and extends to the middle of the Graham (Shady I Pine) marsh. The next grading j contract will carry to the foot I of the Algoma hill, where con ! nectlon again will be made with 'the present highway. The 1941 contract will grade and pave ; to the foot of the Algoma grade I The engineer said further that I an investigation is to be made of j the cost of improving tho stale highway west of town from ; South Riverside to Grccnsprings- Weed Junction. 11. P. Bosworth. director of the chamber of com i mere In charge of roads and I highways, and Earl C. Reynolds. 1 secretary, emphasued in a dis , cussion with Baldock that this road carries extremely heavy traffic, particularly to and from Kesterson, Weyerhaeuser and Kalplne mills. Baldock stated that "some" work is to be done soon on the old Midland road, this havini j been authorized by the highway communion. Turning to the Willamette highway. Baldock said: "Travelers may have noticed roughness developing on this new highway. On a long section of this road, only half the sur facing was Installed and a thin coat of oil added In order to get the road open two years ahead of the time that would otherwise have been possible. "As rapidly as funds are avail able, we will finish the founda tion and place heavy oil surfac ing on the Willamette highway I "The forest service is con tracting for heavy foundation and oil surfacing of six miles along Odell lake." I Baldock said that re-location 1 surveys on the west end of the I Willamette highway have been made. I The engineer was here only i briefly on his way north from a I trip to Shasta dam near Red I ding. He went on to Eugene j Thursday morning. National Cotton Week is May 16 to 24. We hope to see cotton batten a thousand: A circus is where a small boy drags his dad to see his dadJ have a good time. BIG DOUBLE MIDNITE PLAYS SATURDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW ONLY Doors Open at 11:45 Show Starts at Midnite M -W Ski I -au 7 nw 2ND BIG THRILL HIT! "THE WALKING DEAD" CHILLS and THRILLS GALORE! (Continued from Page One) recommendations of your board regarding the terms and condi tions of a contract between the corporation and the UAW-CIO. we havo decided to accept these recommendations." Wilson said "In arriving at this decision, we gave consideration to the na tional defense program and to all the other problems that con front us and decided It was the best thing to do in the interests of all concerned." Wilson said the company par ticularly appreciated that the board "recognized the reason ableness of our position regard ing the present form of union recognition and consequently was not prepared to recommend the adoption by the corporation of the union shop in any form." CONFER WITH (Continued from Page One) information, after which they were believed to have gone to No 10 Downing street It was stated definitely they had come to London to see Churchill, who reportedly had refused to meet personally Hit ler's "shadow" and most fanatic supporter from the birth of nazism. Hitler Plot Eyad The tone of the British to ward Hess has shifted and the people were warned officially his fantastic flight may have been engineered by or sancti fied by Hitler as a plot to plant the germ of a ieace movement In Britain to hinder the nation's war effort. Attention was focusing more and more on the 38-year-old duke, premier earl of Scotland and a member of King George Vi s Royal Scottish bodyguard, as new details of his friendship and correspondence with the No 3 nazi leader, who is Britain's prize prisoner of war, were di vulged. LONDON, May 13 P Ru dolph. Hess' strange flight to Scotland was with the full knowledge of his fuehrer. Labor SHOW Minister Ernest Ilevln said to day, and a highly placed Amer ican declined tluit, whatever the purpose, it Is a threat to the Iliitlsh. Prime Minister Churchill de layed a full statement, hut de nied that a separate H-aee with Scotland was one of the Illusory purposes llesa might have had in his Saturday night descent on a Scottish moor to seek out a Scottish nobleman, the Duke of Hamilton. Blows Foreseen The American, who preferred to keep his anonymity In the Is sue because of its dome-itle re verberations, declared Hess was either the witting or unwitting harbinger of new blows l.y the German military machine. As if to accent his warning, it was officially announced from Cairo today that the German luftuaffc was moving into Iraq, using bases in the French man date of Syria as way stations. i Called Murderer I "From my point of view." said, Labor Minister Itevin. making known his views, "Herr Hess is a murderer." He added that he was not go ing to be "deceived" by what he called a stunt which had been tried over and over again "by totalitarian gentlemen and communists." Hess, he said, is "No man I would ever negotiate with." and "I do not believe that Hitler did not know Mess was coming to England." Explaining the delay of 48 hours In making the fust Brit ish announcement of Hess' com ing. Churchill said "It (the delay) certain was not unfortunate, but if It had been unfortunate it would have been unavoidable." ; He did not believe the story I lew.iiiiijH TODAY and JOLLY JOY IN tffr leant v in JUi 1 Inn Rev Ceroton M.1ef f Am Wlnltrs M...al J ON THE HUCMIt QU AftTITTI f A 4 S jT DON camp , 4,, cam 1 mi a . mrt mt tuner iTlvJr 1 Nj' stooges .'VnTV Boobs In U':VVeV, " , ii CARTOON "'" liaattjejs.; wvwt r'l NEWS l I TODAY .... SATURDAY . . . PEATURS UN . H . HlM STAOS I'll MAT. I H - (VI. T'H . tm himself when he first heard It, he aid. and conclusive idcutlff cation had to be established If) the face of the "surprising char acter of the Information," Asserting It was Hess' Index card system which had made tho nazis' persecution of German la bor leaders and social democrats so thorough. Ilevln said the "se cret Information" brought by Hess was about Internal condi tions In Germany and his con cern was for Germany and not for Uritaln. Too Rosy "I'm suspicious of the whole thing." the American declared. He expressed critlctsin of tho Hi null handling of the affair as having "spread too rosy a glow, and this, combined with German emphasis on the angle that Hess come to tho British Isles with suggestions fur a peace under-.-.taiidiug, may lull peuplo into a letup and soften them for new blows by Germany." Hess is still nursing his ankle fracture at an unidentified mill tary hospital. Y The prize prisoner's hospital is now completely gtiardrft aguinit intruftiuiis, it was report ed today, with Scotland Yard opcraltvcj augmenting army reg ulars. All old aoitiaiutaiiee of Hess a German who came to England several years ago after holding an influential place In pre-nazi politics flatly declared he fell there was little chanco that Hess would divulge any important German military secrets. The German, now strongly pro ltritish. said that Hess was "unimaginatively intelligent and that his patriotism was above suspicion." Rsad the Classified Page, SATURDAY 1 J 1 -j I - 'I J , If V' ,, SCREEN I till . I ll . M . I M . .H I' llll . : OMillmiMi trtm i Nm 0