The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, January 08, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Jantinrr C IfllJ
' JAGE TWO
THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SOVIET-TROOPS
mm gaps
p
JJ (Continued from Page One)
3 whether these were outpost or
put ot th main German de
fenses, but certainly indicated
that the invaders expected a long
J winter's stay.
In London, Lord Privy Seal
J Clement R. Attlee, who serves
as .Prime Minister Churchill's
5 deputy, told parliament that "the
initiative definitely has passed
over to the Russians," and he
added:
JJ "It is hardly even the pretense
of the German high command
2 that all these retreats are in so
cordance with plans, and these
"frantic appeals for warm cloth
Ming show more clearly than any
2 thing else that there has been a
complete upset of Hitler's plans."
J Inner Trouble
In this connection, London
2 newspaper reports said machine-
gun posts were being set up at
2 strategic points in Berlin, man
aned by Hitler's own SS (elite
2 guard) troops, as a precaution
against a coup d'etat, but a Brit
2 ish foreign office spokesman
warned that reports of a pos-
2 sible Internal upheaval in Ger
m many should be treated with re-
serve.
3 In the North African cam-
2 paign, the disclosure that British
a forces had advanced a total of
J 600 miles meant, if the distance
given were airline, that they had
cut around far .to the rear of
m the retreating main axis armies
3 to somewhere in the vicinity of
Misurata, Mediterranean sea
3 port, only 120 miles east of
Tripoli. If the figure meant
2 the longer caravan trails, it'
would, place the British advance
2 south of Agedabia where British
troops were said to. have pene
2 'trated 20 to 40 miles pursuing
the remnants of Gen. Erwin
2 Rommell's armored corps.
Crimea War j
2 On the soviet front, the Ger-
man 'high command acknowl
2 edged continuing Russian at-
tacks In the central (Moscow)
2 and - northern (Leningrad) sec
m tors, and said German bombers
2 attacked docks and shipping at
Feodosiya, which the Russians
J, have recaptured and -were ap-
parenuy using as a main case in
2 the Crimean counter-offensive.
The. British radio quoted re
2 ports that the Russians had land-
ed at many new points, support-
ed by soviet warships, while a
m Moscow radio broadcast declared
that the long-besieged red g ar
il rison- at Sevastopol had taken
the offensive. , :
2 Submarine Menace
Indicated Waning
On West Coast
2 SEATTLE, Jan. 8 0P Indi-
cations of at least a temporary
a subsidence of the submarine
menace off the Pacific coast were
2 seen in an official 13th naval dis-
trict statement issued late yester
2 day, which pointed out, however,
m that American-Canadian patrols
remain vigilant and active.
Merchant, vessel traffic has for
2 the time being returned to nor
m mal, the statement said, after a
rawer ineuective submarine
campaign off the Pacific coast
by enemy undersea craft."
"In the Puget Sound areas,
British Columbia waters and off
the Columbia river a continuous
patrol by inshore and offshore
surface craft and aircraft was
and is being maintained by the
navy."
, Presence of enemy surface
craft in the vicinity of the
Aleutians on December 31 was
indicated. "Merchant vessels in
Alaska waters were warned into
the nearest ports on December
29 due to suspected presence of
Jap vessels," the statement said.
School District
Lets Gas Contracts
The county school district
Wednesday opened bids for gaso
line for 1942 at the regular
board meeting.
Contracts were awarded for
gas to Associated, Standard and
Gilmore oil companies, at 14.72
cents per gallon of standard
grade gas.
RQNT
3 Man loses his 20 deciduous,
or milk teeth, by approximately
J the 13th year of life.
I Relief At Last
For Your Cough
3 Creomulslon relieves promptly be
ll cause It goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
5 to soothe and heal raw, tender, ln
J flamed bronchial mucous mem
m b rants. Tell your druggist to sell you
at a bottle of Creomulslon with the un-
demanding you must like the way It
quickly allays the cough or you axe
m to have your money back.
iCREOMULSION
foCouhl,CheitCold,Brpnchiri
Contributors
To Red Cross
(Continued from Page One)
ery 2.00
First Christian Church .. 20.37
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Quick 3 .00
Clara Wmegar 3.00
A Friend 15.00
William George Sleep 2.50
Mrs. M. Ellis Smith 1.00
Verna Ostrom 2 50
E. G. Kay 2.50
Dorothy Bailie 2.00
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Carl
son 2.00
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Lund . 2.00
J. V. Owens 5.00
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Sari .. 5.00
Klamath Tire
Rationing Board
Examines Needs
(Continued from Page One)
the procedure to be followed
is for an applicant who comes
under the eligibility classification
as established by the office of i
production management to come j
to the board's headquarters at i
the chamber of commerce and '
receive an application. When j
this application is properly
filled out it is then taken to:
one of the tire examiners and )
if this examiner certifies that the j
tire could not be recapped, then !
the application is returned to j
the board's headquarters for ac-I
ton.
It was further pointed out that
the applicant must establish the :
need for the tire regardless of
his eligibility to receive one.
The following was quoted '
from the Tire Rationing Regula-,
tions: j
The board may issue certifi- i
cates only to applicants who
show . . . "That the existing tires
or tubes cannot be recapped, re
treaded, or repaired for safe use
at speed at which the applicant
may reasonably be expected to
operate, or that such recapping,
repairing, or retreading 'cannot
be obtained without inordinate
delay."
At Wednesday's meeting,
Chairman Drury of the ration
ing board explained the prob
lems of the board, the dealers
and the motoring public in de
tail. He advised dealers to help
the public solve its tire prob
lems in the best way possible.
"Help them through their trou
bles now and you will make
friends that will help you in
your business later on," he said.
. Ha said that there should be
doubling up on the part of men
driving to and from work.
Discussing inspection, Drury
said: "We want an honest in
spection. Tires must be recapped
if possible. We must conserve
everything we have and make
it go as far as possible."
Percy Murray, a member of
the board, reminded the dealers
that "chiseling will make the
whole program collapse."
Tire re-capping operators here
are flooded with orders, it was
reported, and many people are
apparently getting tires not
neeed for immediate use. Oth
ers are without tires and are
forced to wait while the "hoard
ers" get their orders filled.
The monthly Klamath county
tire quotas are:
Casings Passenger cars. 64;
trucks, 150.
Tubes Passenger cars, 54;
trucks, 125.
The dealers at the meeting
Wednesday elected an executive
committee to confer with the
board on complaints and other
matters that may come up. The
members are Elmer Balsiger. J.
W. Jerns Jr., and Jack Schulze.
A committee to conduct a sur
vey of tire consumption here last
year is composed of A. D. John
son, James Kerns and B. C.
Shaw.
Auto Collisions
Reported Here
A minor collision occurred
Wednesday between cars driven
by Freide Foster of 1804 Arthur
street and L. G. Zimn of route 3.
Washburn way and LaVerne
intersection was the scene Tues
day of a broadside collision in
volving Herman Jensen of Long
Bell with J. C. Leverick of 3640
Bisbee street. No injuries were
reported.
A minor collision was report
ed on the highway near Merrill
Tuesday between Mike Moonan
and Don Barnes, both of Merrill.
Masonic Meeting The Klam
ath lodge No. 77 of the AF&AM
will meet in the Masonic temple
Friday night, January 9, at 7:30
o'clock for work in the Fellow
craft degree. All members and
visiting brethren are cordially in
vited. If you want to get a rise out of
a real American, play the Star
Spangled Banner.
To Help
Prevent
COLDS
from developing
Put a few drops of Vlcks Va-tro-not
up eacn nomru at the very first sniffle,
soeese or sign of nasal Irritation. Its
quick action aids
nature's aeienses wirrc
mitutmliU SVillnw WH
PHILIPPINE FORCES
AWAITING ASSAULT
(Continued from Page One)
their strength for a vital blow.
The whereabouts and inten
tions of the United States Paci
fic fleet apparently were causing
renewed concern today in Tokyo.
There was evidence of this in
the enemy's recourse to the axis
guessing technique the circula
tion of vague reports designed
to elicit valuable information.
Both the Tokyo radio and a
German-controlled station coop
erated in broadca5ting the initial
feelers. Tokyo was heard report
ing an engagement between the
Japanese and American fleets in
the western Pacific. The naii
story, aired from a station in the
Netherlands, had the Japanese
attacking two US battleships en
route to Australia, and sinking
one of them.
The navy department here de
clined comment in Tokyo's sea
battle last night, and dismissed
the naii report as something con
taining "not an iota of truth."
It was noted in passing here,
however, that the reports hardly
bore out the repeated axis claims
that the Pacific fleet had been
"crippled." "knocked out," and
finally as one Japanese source
had it "destroyed to pieces" by
the Pearl Harbor attack.
The fog of war has shrouded
most of the naval operations in
the Pacific, but the concentration
of a strong Japanese naval force
at the southern tip of the Philip
pines recently was interpreted
here as an indication that the
enemy was preparing to launch
major scale operations against
the East Indies.
Police "Arsenal"
Of Alien Goods
Shows Increase
Klamath's arsenal, consisting
of goods turned over to police
officers by enemy aliens, was
augmented Thursday at noon
when three shotguns, five rifles
and "several hundred rounds" of
ammunition were brought to the
police station voluntarily. Assis
tant Chief of Police Earl Heuvel
stated.
To date the sheriff's office has
received two shotguns, two rifles.
two radios, two cameras and one
revolver.
Deadline on turning over ma
terial of this sort is 11 p. m.
Thursday. After that date arti
cles will be confiscated according
to government ruling.
Long Distance
Calls Delayed
3 Hours Here
Long distance calls from Klam
ath Falls to Portland were being
delayed three hours Thursday
afternoon due to technical trans
mission difficulties, Charles Sea
vey of the Pacific Telephone and
Telegraph company announced.
Seavcy said that only one line
was available for commercial
use and it was "jammed to the
guards."
The jam resulted in only in
termittent reception of news on
the Associated Press teletypes at
the News-Herald offices.
It was expected the trouble
would be cleared up by Friday.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our many
friends and neighbors for their
kindness and sympathy, and for
the beautiful flowers sent dur
ing our recent bereavement.
Peggy and Gene Robertson,
The Kilgore Family.
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
LOST Rose gold Bulova watch.
Reward. Phone 3560. 1-10
YOU MAY ENROLL next week I
in new Civil Service and bust- j
ness classes being organized !
at Interstate Business College.
432 Main. 1-8
YOUNG MAN entering Inter-1
state Business College wants
part-time work to earn board
and room. 1-8 !
FOUR-ROOM DUPLEX $35.
Three-room cottage, gas. Ph.
7668. 1-10
HOUSE FOR RENT on pave
ment, $25 month. 1542 Ore
gon Ave. See E. C. Cochran,
Dairy. 1-10
1937 CHEVROLET SEDAN for
sale or trade for later car. 519
Main. 1-9
EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER
wishes part-time work. Box
555, News-Herald. 1-10
FOR SALE 2-year-old Guern
sey heifer with day-old heifer
calf. Mary E. Dixon, Rt. 1,
Box 824. 1-12 j
OIL TO BURN For Union
heating oils, phone 8.404,
Klamath Oil Co., 615 Klam
ath. l-31mtf
1936 Oldsmobile
Touring Sedan
Excellent tires and appearance.
Earl Smith' Pontiac
834 Klamath 1-9
Editorials on News
(Continued From Page Onci
limit is being established at once
in the national parks and he
thinks it would be a good idea it
40 mile limits were established
in all tho states.
If that is done, he thinks, it
should be in the name of rubber
conservation, as excessive speed
is perhaps the chief cause ot ex
cessive tire wear.
Distilleries Turn
To Defense Work
On OPM Orders
WASHINGTON. Jan. 8 P
The government today ordered
approximately 60 per cent of the
nation's distilleries to turn their
available facilities into produc
tion of industrial alcohol.
The order, issued by Donald
M. Nelson, OPM director of pri
orities, provided that distilleries
with facilities to make industrial
alcohol from corn or other grain
must use them after January 15
only in producing that type of al
cohol. It was estimated that 60 per
cent of the industry s capacity
was subject to the order.
At the same time. OPM
spokesmen said no shortage in
alcoholic beverages was antici
pated since there was more than
five years norma) supply al
ready in storage.
Industrial alcohol technical
ly 190 proof Ethyl alcohol is es
sential in variety of industrial
and war operations and is par
ticularly important in tho pro
duction of smokeless powder.
Labor Panel in
Session at Weed
On Final Accord
A three-man department of la
bor panel headed by Federal
Labor Conciliator Ernest P.
Marsh was still in session in
Weed, Calif., Thursday in an ef
fort to find a final settlement to
the recent eight-week mill strike
at the Long-Bell Lumber com
pany of Weed.
The panel met with employe
and company representatives
Monday. Evidence of the meet
ing was to be taken to San
Francisco and a decision ren
dered from there.
Twelve-hundred employes of
Long-Bell were on strike from
October 20 to December 15 in a
demand for higher pay, union
shop and a week's vacation with
pay. The men returned to work
following a government, request
a week after war was declared
with the provision that both
sides would be bound by find
ings of the arbitration body.
Chinese Airmen
Join in Battle
In Hunan Area
(Continued from Pago One) i
ported engaged north of the Milo
river.
The forces they sought to re
lieve were said to be tinder at
tack from all sides on a battle
field between the Milo and
Laotao rivers just east of the
Canton-Hankow rail line.
A Chinese spokesman estimat
ed that Japan's losses in dead
and wounded in the battle for
Changsha totaled 35,000 men.
A deaf and dumb person who
is fairly expert at finger lan
guage can speak about 43
words a minute.
Los Angeles, Calif., is the
largest American city east of
Reno, Nev., and west of Den
ver, Colo.
TOHIOHT AT
HURRY ENDS TONIGHT!
raNEW TOMORROWS
A Terrific Program! 2
Socond Ace
ACTION. CMHmO ADVIHTUM
. gj& Penny ,
ii 'ii' in ii mi " naX a xii.ieaB3SBiriii.nii jii irri
Serial Thrills with Jack Holt in
"HOLT OF THE SECRET SERVICE"
Ootar Oirtoen, "OPPI0IR POOCH" - Utt Htm
1941 FUNDS LEFT
The Klnmath project of the
' United States bureau of reclame
. tion in Oregon and California,
I including the Tulelake project,
was allotted $113,000 from the
reclamation special funds, ac
cording to word received here
Wednesday from Washington,
D. C. This is for operation and
maintenance only, it is reported.
There is a carry over of J10,
000 from last year's appropria
tion for construction purposes,
according to Superintendent
B. E. Hnyden, balance left from
the $500,000 appropriation of the
1942 fiscal year. This is ample
to continue construction work
here, Hay don said.
President Roosevelt recom
mended to congress Wednesday
in his annual budget message
that it continue construction and
expansion of hydro-electric pro
jects in the three Pacific coast
states at a cost of more than
I $100,000,000 during the fiscal
I year starting next July 1. Rec-
tarnation work, financed from
i the reclamation fund, was sharp
1 ly cut with a total of $834,000
as compared to $6,512,000 for
! the current year.
WALL STREET SAYS
NEW YORK, Jan. 8 W The
billions to finance the gigantic
war effort, as outlined in Presi
dent Roosevelt's budget message
today, will be forthcoming as
rapidly as required.
This was the consensus in fi
nancial circles in Wall Street to
day. Top banking authorities said
the financial machinery of the
country was being effectively
meshed into the war effort, and
the job ot financing a Job doub
ling the efforts of the axis pow
ers would be accomplished.
Most financial leaders wanted
time to study the extensive mes
sage before making formal com
ment, but Frederick H. Eckcr,
chairman of the $5,000,000,000
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
nation's largest financial institu
tion, promptly said "I like it."
Another top financier said.
"Splendid. This assures that we
are going all out to win tho war.
It brings Pearl Harbor into every
home. Everyone will put his
shoulder to the wheel."
The securities markets took
the news of the unprecedented
spending and taxing with scarce
ly a ripple. The market for U. S.
government bonds was virtually
unchanged. Stocks were a little
lower, but quiet.
A federal tax bill of some
$26,000,000,000 for fiscal 1943,
on top of state and local taxes of
$8,000,000,000 or $9,000,000,000
would take around one third of a
national income estimated at
around $105,000,000,000, one au
thority pointed out. Recent esti
mates issued by the British em
bassy in Washington Indicated
that in England, taxes were tak
ing about 40 per cent of the na
tional income, or substantially
more than proposed here.
"If the British can do that, we
can readily take a third," said
this expert. He thought we could
take well over a third If neces
sary. The rise in the federal debt to
$110,000,000,000. said financial
men, might look like going in
hock for a long time, but they
pointed out that interest on this
debt at current rates of around
2 per cent would be only some
thing over $2,000,000,000 an
Entertainment Packed Hltsl
Feature
f&hwlth "HOW'1
n
Patriotic Address Heard
At Kiwanis Installation
A stirring patriotic address
by Phil Hitchcock of Bend and
impressive installation cere
mumcs marked the uniuiul In
stiillution liuiuui-l uf tliu Klnm
ath Kiwu:n club held at the
Wlllard hotel Wednesday eve
ning. Mayor John Houston, past
president of the club, presided
as toastmnslcr.
Hitchcock nukI that American
tendencies to "go soft" In the
lust decade which he antd
could not be blamed on tho
politicians or any one party
are a handicap in the war ef
fort and must be replaced by
a more minted and more self
reliant philosophy. He told u(
the part which Kiwiinls clubs
have been assigned in the de
fense program and declared It
is up to the clubs to do their
job well.
Malcolm Epley, newly In
stalled picsldcnt of the club,
spoke In response to the installa
tion remarks given by Hitch
cock. He paid especial tribute
to past presidents of the Ki
wanis club, which was founded
, here in 1922.
I The officers installed, in ad
Wow, What a Big Figure
Or How Much Is Too Much?
By HENRY SUPER
NEW YORK. Jan. 8 (UP)
This may be screwy but
Did you ever try to figure out
how much $59,027,992,300 Is (or
Is It are)?
We did and the adding ma
chine needs an overhauling and
the grocer's bill looks like some
thing to be measured with a
micrometer.
First, let's get that amount In
dollar bills and lay them end to
end. A buck measures 6 18
inches.
That means the United States
in the next fiscal year Is going to
spend 381.548.442.837 inches
worth of greenbacks; 30.128.870,
238 feet lor is it feet's) worth of
lettuce and 5.708.225 miles.
The "mean" distance from the
earth to the moon is 238.857
miles.
Now let's go out and rustic up
the amount In silver dollars.
They make a very nice pile
about 845,000 miles high. That
little toothpick standing next to
it is the empire state building, a
mere Job of 1250 feet.
If you can stand this any
longer, we'll set out and count
the dough. You'd better not
make any dates though this Is
going to take quite some time.
You can accurately count
about 120 dollar bills a minute.
If you started today, and
worked 24 hours a day, it would
take 341.591 days to do the Job.
That figures out to be around 030
years, so you better count on
your social security.
The counting problem can be
attacked from another angle.
Granting that each generation
lives to be 60 and knows how to
count on the day of birth, it
would take about 46 generations,
each working eight hours a day,
365 days a year, to count the
nually, making a carrying charge
not much over 2 per cent of na
tional income, so long as income
is maintained at high levels.
RED, HOT and BLUE!
A JUBILEE of MELODY!
ir
BINO
CROSBY'
BRIAN
Donlevy Lee
Rochester
J. CARROL NAISH
Kitchen Quia A City Within a City
Aesop's Fabla Latest Paramount News
Phona 4587
dition to the president, were
Ed Oslendorf, vice president;
Kcva Hutchinson, secretary; B.
C. Thomas, treasurer, lied
Southwell, Immediate P presi
dent, and the following direc
tors: John Budd, Hnry Perk
ins, It. C. Dale, Orrm II. Frit ley.
Joe L. Hicks. Lester C. Offleld,
Henry E. Perkins. Charles E.
Seavey, E. A. Thomas and Wll
lard W. Ward.
A special event was a pledge
to tho new president given by
charter members of tho club,
led by Toastmaster Houston.
Dunclng followed tho installa
tion dinner. Tho presidents of
other service clubs and their
wives were special guests. Lieu
tenant Governor Charles Wiper
of Eugene was a special visitor,
arriving too late for the speak
ing program because of a late
train. Chaplain D. J. Ferguson
of the U. S. army, a scheduled
speaker, was unable to be pres
ent. Members of the committee In
charge were Dr. E. D. Lamb.
Stanley Woodruff, wninm
Ward. Paul Roberts and E. M
I III.
dough not Including leap year.
You like beer? The money
would buy you 590,279,073,000
glasses of the stuff.
Please dont complain If the
above figures turn out to be one
! or two out of the way.
I Up until a couple of years ago.
j before we discovered there was
such a thing as an adding ma
, chine, we had to take off our
; shoes to count over ten.
Jap Boy Tells of
"Bombs" in Cellar
! PORTLAND. Jan. 8 (UP)
; Police moved fast when investi
gating a report that a Japanese
: resident had a bin full of bombs
in his basement.
Tho news reached officers
I after a nine-year-old Japanese
' boy told schoolmates about the
1 "bombs." Officers looked Into
tho case at once.
In the basement they found
nothing but a bin full of of briq
uets, which must have looked
like hand grenades to the boy.
Steinhardt Named
Envoy to Turkey'
WASHINGTON. Jan. 7 (,!')
Laurence A. Steinhardt, now
ambassador to Russia, was nom
inated by President Roosevelt
today to be ambassador to Tur
key, succeeding J. V. A. Mac
Murray.
The sending of Steinhardt to
Ankara fresh from his diplo
matic service In soviet Russia
was regarded in some official
quarters as significant.
SUIT SALE
Ofw Oreup Hetfwterf I
$18.75
DREW'S MANSTORE
III Him
A Paramount Picture with
MARY
MARTIN
MARY
CAROLYN
(Continued from Tag One)
alarm, although no raiders ip-
pea red.
(Mmilmrln Is famous In the
Kipling I'wm as the pine
where lliirma girl waited for
her British Tommy, In th.
shadow of an old pagoda, smok
ing a "whackln' big cheroot."
(Tha Japanese say that tlx
British Spitfires were downed
oiid hangars and other military
equipment set afire In Japanem
Mucks since Saturday on the
Mlngoladon airdrome, 10 mllrt
north of Rangoon.
(Jupanese attacks on the Ran
goon area were repeated Sun
day and Monday, according to
axis reports).
Hot Springs National ParW
Arkansas, was visited by lsQ
A 83 Dersons In 39.008 private
Automobiles during the HMO
fcation.
j alley's comet was the first
whose periodicity was precunei.
This was In 1704. but verifica
tion was not until 1789.
First
Pictures i
of
Rose Bowl
Game
OREGON
STATE
.
DUKE X
8EE ALL THE SPECTAC
ULAR PLAYS Or THIS
THRILLING OREGON
8TATE VICTORY
NOW SHOWING IN
CONJUNCTION WITH
"BIRTH Or THE BLUES"
at
Esquire
Theatre
CTADTC V
w n ill
TODAY!
Shows 2 7 t
Feature at
1.31 7:31 . 9iS
4?
"ST.
Kss i.as?
SCOOP!
directions, in (older. VA TR0 N01