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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1942)
Juno ie, 1042 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE THREI COMPROMISE CONSIDERED IN GROP L By JACK BELL WASHINGTON, Juno 10 (IV A compromise llml would per nilt fiirmcrs lo obhiln lull puri ty Ioiiun on inn Jor crops' mid .III! ullnw tllo UUVoriltlK'Ilt to oil lurplui whunt ut lowor price win ruponea uniior wnuc iimiika cmiHlrltinitloii todny. Tliu propositi win sulci to luive boun nilviiiH'i'd uy Homo mum- I. ...... ..I l..lnt iiiiifi..nf'A mill- uui w " nilttoo, ilrlvlnil to breiik ion- alehouse deadlock on imior fen In ri' ot thn iiiiiiuiil $(1110,000,- 000 furm appropriation! inn. Chief olmiifiit of Iho coutro vcrny Inn liwii a oimto nnieiid' ....! iiiillinrlzlntf Iho uovorii' 5 'inent lo noil up o 125.000,000 it. ,.... I nf wlifiit for llveiitock fredlnil purposes ut about 03 cent! II bimltiil inswau oi iiio full purity prlco of J1.34 a bushel. I'liK hnuin Insisted Oil tho lilt tcr flKuro ond somo scniilnrs huvo advocated Its adoption but there have been report Hint President nooKovelt mltihl veto tlio bill If thli were dono. Sonaton Hanhhcatl (D-Aln.) and KumoII (D Gu.) already hove ..iiiiu a bill renulrlnii innnda- tory government lonni up lo I. .11 ..nrltv an ItMllor CrOOI Ulld soma member! said It wna poi- libla nn nKreomeni coma do reached lo Include inch a pro vision In the iipproiirliitloni bill, retiilnliiK I h o somite-approved IJuitliorlty for the Bovcrnment to tell wheat at mo o.vccm icvoi. Losing Membership Team Entertains Jaycees Monday The regular dinner meeting of the Junior chamber of commerce on Monday nluht wa nt tho ex pernio of tho losing membership tworn, captained by Cliarllo Mack, A buffet lupper was furnlnhcd by thl lenm to the winning membership team, cop tulncd by Martin Swnnnon. Tho biwlnew offnlm of the Jayccen, Including arrangement! for tho Fourth of July parade, were postponed for a puroly social occasion. Another Shortage Appears Buyers , For Automobiles PORTLAND, June 18 P) Tho rubber nhorlngo and talk of gatollne rationing ii creating another ahortago a lock of buyers for new automobiles. Hubert G. Lnron, chief of tha OPA automobile rationing branch, sold there wero BOB can left over from Oregon'! March, April and May quotai. For ollglblo buyers there also will bo tho Juno quota of 332 63 Indicted in Lottery Operation DETItOlT, Juno 18 VP) U. S. Vlstrlct Attorney J. C. Lchr cllscloacd today that 03 resident! of tho United States, Cuba and Panama hnd been Indicted ai conspirator! In an International lottery operation described by postal authorities as one of the largest and most extensive In tho United States. A federal grand Jury relumed the Indictment June 1, based on Iho operations of tho Rcpubllca do Cubn hospital Fundi lottery. Lehr said District Judgo Ernest A. O'Brien had ordered it sup pressed to facilitate tho arrest of tho defendants, which was scheduled for today. Peyton Named to Association Post ' Leslie Pcylon, former Klam nth Falls real estate man, has Jjecn mndo vlco president of tho TScjitllable SavlnRS and Loan as sociation of Portland. Peyton's headquarters will bo In Seattle, ond ho will servo as Washington slnto manager for tho company, "NATIONAL FATHER" NEW YORK, Juno 18 (P) General D o u g 1 a I MacArthtir was n a m o tl by tho national Father's (lay committee today a! tho "outstanding American father of 1042." It takes 0000 pounds of rag content bond to make enough blueprint paper to draw the plans for ono pursuit ship. OXFORD IVIHT ROOM WITH TU 1 IHOWIt ONE rmoN RATE two n,so j) ML i rtfiM hi rnrrm Corrogidor Surrender Scene t 1 'jr- If w if t A 1. t' It. 1 : a 2 tX Thli plcturs, which wm fadlood to BuaHbi Almt, Argentina, by th Japanei for Hi propaganda effect, i described by tha Japt at ihowlng United Stales troopt cmetglng front an under ground passage on Corregldor to surrender to the Japs when tha island fortress fell May 6, Picture sent to U. S. by air. Hitler's Relentless Fight Against Church Continues, In Spite of Apparent Truce (Editor's note: Louis P. Loch ner, chief of tho former Berlin bureau of the Associated Press and Wide World, points out the nature of noil attacks on the church. In thli tenth scries for Tho Herald and New! lnco his return from Internment in Ger many.) By LOUIS P. LOCHNCn NEW YOUK, June 10 (Wide World) Adolf Hitler Ii fighting tho established Roman Catholic and Lutheran churches just as relentlessly as he ever did, ol though outwardly there oppcors to be a truce. The church lenders of both faithi haven't been fooled. They know that Alfred Rosen berg, Hitler's "Ideological lead er," has prepared o secret mem orandum, of which a copy In In their possession, In which he do munds. In substance, that after the victorious ending of tho war nobody who still clings to mem bership in Iho Christian churches shall be allowed to hold any government Job what soever not even that of messen ger or charwoman. Ono must always remember. In dealing with tho German church situation, that the dyed- in-tho-wool nazl regards, the Christian religion as a Jewish product. It is therefore ana thema to him. That small band of "German Christians" who tried to har monize nazlsm with Christianity by eliminating the Old Tcstn- monl, tho epistles of bl. rmil, tho sermon on tho mount, and who tried to make Jesus out as the foo of Judaism and as an Aryan from Nazareth, now is vir tually In the discard, so far as any Influence on nnzl thinking and nnzl prncticc is concerned . Indirect Attack During wartime, tho attack on the churches Is not open; it is In direct. The ralllc! of the Hitler youth organization nro arranged for tho very hour when Christian hel overs f ock to tliolr churches Tho little boy who nevertheless goes to church with his parent Is a pariah, an outcast, a "sissy" to his classmates. If ho persists In Ignoring the Sunday rallies, ho is thrown out of tho organization and as he grows up later this fact is held WE MAY HAVE TO ... imitHi imimon miua it mom ihii whiikh it kiilij i V A b Km it ifilfi..Ul f i; 1 sr.. a -t ia 1 t t-'K'l against him wherever ho appears lo apply for a Job. A Protestant farmer In the Brandenburg orea told me how the local nnzl farmers' ' lcador tried to counteract the churches by summoning tho farmers un der his Jurisdiction to confer ence! and meetings during church-timo on Sunday morn Ing!. "We all ganged up against him," this farmer assured me, "and so he didn't get away with it. But If there had been any wavcrers In our midst, the story might have been a different one." . Wherever soldiers io Insist, they are assigned an army chap lain. But unless such a demand comes, or unless the particular general In charge of a division iitKisLs upon it, religious services nrq not held. Clergymen ore forbidden to visit the sick In slate owned and operated hospitals and institu tions. Important festival days. If they full within the week, have been called off "because of the war." The faithful fear tho naz Is never will permit their rein traduction after tha war. Ministers and priests are for bidden to conduct religious in struction in tho schools. Catholic and Protestant kin dergartens, where working mothers could leave their chil dren during the day, now have been eliminated by the nazls. It's nazl , kindergarten! only for everybody. The rcllgloti! press virtually has censed to exist. Religious editors wero told there was such a shortage of paper that church papers must cease publication. During the last year, the ges tapo has seized on untold num ber of convent! and other Insti tutions belonging to religious or ders. Tho Jesuits, Franciscans and Benedictines suffered cs pcclnlly. Property Sailed Nuns, priests and lay broth- crs generally wero forced to leave their homes overnight wllh only a few, personal be longings. Tho property seized was used cither ns SS headquarters, as homes for tho mothers of Illegi timate children, as offlco space for nnzl parly officials, or for similar purposes. Now as always in history, however, tho "blood of tho mar USE A CHARIOT but Old Quaker WhMcu wiU "deliver the goodsl" 1 1 iam w mi oio ouiut to., uwititaiiM.wt. Restrict Home Use of Sugar, Expert Says SAN FRANCISCO, June 10 Families which did not receive war ration books because of ex cess itiaar on hand were advised this week by Edgar Slnton, re gional rationing executive of the Offlco ot Prlco Administration, to restrict their home use of sugar to tho prescribed consumer allotment of a pound per person each two weeks. Otherwise, he warned, "households not re stricting their lugar consumption lo tho prescribed allotment! will be penalizing only themselves since tho dny may como when they hnvo no sugnr and will not be permitted to purchase any. Sinton explained that his of. flee hod received report! that some people, who registered ex cess amounts of sugar, believed that they would be able to ob tain war ration books as loop os the excess wns gone, regardless of the length of time In which it was consumed. No ration books will be Issued to registrants of excess sugar un til a sufficient number of ration period! hnvo expired during which the consumer if he had ration itamps might have pur chased an amount of sugar equal to his excess. Housewives who have not re ceived war ration books may ap ply for lugar canning certificates at their local rationing boards provided they have registered, if they arc granted canning allot ments on the basis of one pound of sugar for every four quarts of finished canned fruit and one pound per person for preserves, tho amount will be deducted from their excess inventory. Thus, there can be a reduction of the waiting period for ration books. Sinton warned housewives that iugar obtained on a can ning certificate must be used for that purpose. Homemakers who use their canning allotments for other purposes arc guilty of vio lating section 1407.203, ration ing order No. 3. and the penalty for such violation is a fine of not more than $10,000 or Im prisonment of not more than one year or both. tyn is the !eed of the church." The arrests of score! of Catholic priest!, the dramatic relegation to a concentration camp of Luth eran Pastor Martin Niemoeller have not been able to kill off Christianity in Germany. On the contrary, now, during the war, the churches are fuller than ever. We had occasion to observe this during our internment at Bad Nauheim. Both the Catho lic and the Protestant churches were so near to our habitat, the Grand Hotel Jcschkc, that we could see the worshippers come and go. Both churches always were crowded. In Berlin we had made the same observation: Here, too, there was a marked picking up In church attendance. Airplanes require from 33 to - 98 pound! of rubber for tires, with an additional 24 to 55 pounds for inner tubes. Special Demonstration 'rraLILx- 1 will be In our store for consultation and to dis play the complete line of ORTHOPEDIC 'and dress footwear, Including stylos for Fall. Mr. Stewart, hc fitting expert, will orthograph your feet and analyxe your shoe problems free of chargo. See the many different ttytet of these famous thoet. All sixes and widths, with high, medium and low heels, smarter than ever. Here 2 Days Only Wednesday Thursday JUNE 17th - 18th STEWART -SMITH SHOE STORE ' . 627 Main St. War Stops Study Of Mid-Columbia Utility District SALEM, June 18 (IP) The slato hydroelectric commission, explaining It could not conduct u study because of the war, failed to make a recommendation as to tho feasibility of the proposed mid-Columbia peoples utility dis trict. The commission'! report, Is sued today, said the total area of the district is 202 square miles, comprising parts of Gilliam, Morrow, Sherman and Wheeler counties. Population of the dis trict will estimated at 9180, in cluding 4428 in towns and cities, and 781 In rural districts. The commission said that the district, If cr ffli ted, would make available an organization for making a complete investigation of the practicability of acquiring and operating electrical facilities. Ickes Authorizes Organization of Alaska War Council WASHINGTON. June 18 P) Immediate organization of an Alaskan war council to mobilize civilian manpower and resources to support defense of that ter ritory wai directed today by Interior Secretary Ickei. Governor Ernest Gruening will be chairman of the council which will cooperate closely with military authorities in put ting the territory on a full pre paredncss footing. President Roosevelt'! authorl zation of the council stated that it should be the duty of the council to maintain close liaison with the military authorities to bring the conduct of federal civil activitie! into closest pos sible conformity with military requirements. Pvt. Shultz Hits 221 Out of 250 CAMP ROBERTS, Calif., June 16 Private Donald M. Shultz, Klamath Falls, can count himself among tho best men with a rifle in training here. By scoring 'ill out of a po'ble 250 points he earned one of 24 expert rifle man ratings handed out when his battalion set a new camp record for number of men quail- fvine on the 220 yard range. Over 87 per cent ot me lum Infantry Tarining Battalion quai ified aa marksmen, sharpshoot ers or expert!, and Private Shultz made his mark in a com pany that qualified 03 per cent of his personnel. THOUGHTFUL ITALY. Tex.. UP) W. H. Formby has an obliging hen, She always lays eggs with handles on them. Municipal dumps and incin erators have been urged to in itiate measures for efficient sal vaging of waste materials. Mr.lral I. Stewart Factory Repreientotiv for CANTILEVER and Ground Gripper Shoe Sliiil ' TUB' RY yZjILr YOUR STANDARD SERVICE MAN We Pay Uncle Sam needs your old rubber and we Standard Service Men will pay you . a penny a pound for itt Then the Gov ernment buys it from us at the same' price. If you want to donate your old rubber and many will we will pass along the proceeds from that rubber to ' the USO or some other worthy cause. Bring it in any amount of old rubber you have: garden hose, raincoats, rub ber boots, old tires, bathing caps, leaky DON'T DROP THESE INCENDIARIES! mm , t Invisible Gas Station! Yesair, TVe seen itt At an Army airfield, it's a Stand ard Service Station. But this station's not red-white-arid blue. It's cam ouflaged. You can't see it from the air. Neat job II GREASE IS STANDARD takes BETTER CARE OF YOUR CAR ! STANDARD dlL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA You For Old hot water bottles, anything that's made of rubber. Of course the Government doesn't want you to give up anything you're using and would have to replace with new rubber, but many folks have lots of discarded rubber goods lying around. Here's your chance to get rid of yours and do your country a real favor at the same time. The rubber col ; lection drive ends at midnight June 30, -so bring yours in nowl ' - cm os Air is free but you'd never know it to look at some people's tires " -1 hate to think how many ter rible forest fires have been : started because somebody flipped a cigarette or match from a car window thinking it was "out" Now that almost every car has an ash tray. let's give our forests a break by using it exclusively. Any of us Standard Service Men will gladly clean it out for you. Is there oil on your garage floor? Have you ever noticed how clean we Standard Serv ice Men keep the drives at our stations? Thafs be cause there's nothing that rots tires so quick as oil and grease. If your home garage has oil on the floor, give it a strong soap powder and hot water treat ment. Sunlight is hard on tires, too, so park inside or in the shade wherever you can. CHEAPER THAN METAL! Do you know that the entire weight of your car rests on about 64 bearing surfaces? And remem- ber, all that keeps them from grinding them selves to bits, is grease. That's why it's so important to get the right lubricant to the right place at the right time. That's a job in which every one of us Standard Service Men is thoroughly and systematically trained. 1 r V sTkV ri I l T" r . . m sssskc 1 ' ar-TJvsVni1 Rubber! I ST,wfllD