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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1942)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON July 8. 1941 BERLIN HELD RUSHING HELP TO ROifllE! (Continued from Pag On) Und anchor and establishing a Idewall. Security Meatur The British regarded this as a security measure against a flank attack but there was no indica tion whether it was because mil Field Marshal Erwin Hommel was organizing a new attempt to burst the bottleneck or because he had strength left only to hold on. ... (Stockholm newspaper dis patches from Berlin indicated uneasiness in the nazl capital over Rommel's position. One cor respondent reported that he was in difficulty because his exhaust ed troops faced British Gen. Sir Claude J. E. Auchlnleck's fresh reinforcements. (Heavy axis attacks on Malta were taken by the British in London to mean that convoys were hurrying reinforcements across the Mediterranean to Rommel. Evidence of the weight of enemy efforts to eliminate that British Isle as a threat to Rommel's supply routo from Eu roDe was Malta's report last night that 24 raiders had been shot down there in 24 hours.) (Continued from Page One) pi. The principle, h added, was whether the government's parity program was going to be broken down. Under present law, cooperat ors in the crop control program are able to obtain loans at 85 per cent of parity on the six major crops. Under a full par ity loan program, they could borrow 15 cents a bushel more than the present market price on corn, and 38 cents a bushel mora on wheat. Russell Speaks Senator Russell asserted the bill would "place a floor under farm products which will enable the farmer to exist In a world of rising prices for the things he has to buy." Majority Leader Barkley (Ky. of the senate told reporters, boW' r, that only about 350,000,000 bushals of the expected 800,000,' 000 bushel wheat harvest would b raised by cooperatora and thus subject to full loans. The remaining "free wheat" would have to find its own price level Barkley said, and he predicted that any increase resulting from passage of the bill would be temporary. Cannon forecast a presides Ual veto for the loan bill if it passed the house. When it will come up for action in that chanv ber is problematical, as it is sub ject to hearings in the agricul ture committee. Deductions From Soldiers' Checks Start (Continued from Pag One) wife) before first payments are mode on November 1. The law specified payments to be effec tive as of June 1, but delay in setting up the vast administra tlve machinery will postpone the Initial payments for four months. Thereafter the government checks will go out monthly. Although formal application blanks will not be available un til about July 25, Col. Thruston Hughes, of Louisville, Ky., head of a staff of 1265 set up to ad minister the new law for the army, has ordered post com manders to accept Informal ap plications to establish date for making monthly deductions. Since deductions and allow ances may accrue from June 1, those in the service on that date started, or were due to start contributing July 1. Those en tering the service after June 1 will have deductions start from the pay of the month following their application for benefits. F. R. HAUGER SIS Market Phon 7221 Has A DAZZLING LASTING WHITE "VVLVX" KEEPS TOUR MAT KZW-LOOKINO Gal. iiiiitiujiuiiiiiiiimiiiiinfiifiiifiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMitiR Editorials on Nws (Continued From Pag One) successfully without adequate supplies. a pIGURES announced today bring the total of ships sunk in the Western Atlantic since Pearl Harbor to 344. Remember that most of these ships have been carrying cargoes of War supplies destined in one way or another for OUR side in the Eu ropean war. That will give you soma idea of the importance of this West ern Atlantic submarine warfare in the axis plans. COME 213 days have elapsed since Pearl Harbor. In that time 344 of our side's ships have been sunk on this side of the Atlantic. That is an average of 1.6 ships per day. It takes quite a building pro gram just to offset this loss in SHIPS alone, but we must re member that the number of ships destroyed doesn't tell the whole story. The loss of the supplies car ried by the ships is a big part of it. CVEN the Japs, with their pro tected water route through the China sea, are worried about communications and are strug gling to break the Chines hold on the last few miles of the rail line that leads, with consider able roundabout wandering, from Shanghai to Singapore. Possession and development of this rail line would free their minds to some extent of the fear of submarine attacks on their water communication line through the China sea. Whatever you do, don't over look the importance of com munications. Commandos A meeting for election of officers will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Elks lodge ladies' room. All members should appear in uniform. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY 4-WHEEL TRAILER, flat rack, S40. People's Warehouse. 7-8 TRAIN at Interstate Business College for civil service posi tions, 432 Main. 7-8 FOR RENT 4 room modern house, electric stove & water heater, linoleum, 17.50 month. A. Jordanger, Shady Pine. 7-10 11937 WILLYS MOTOR, com- plete, mounted on steel frame for stationary power, $75. People's Warehouse. 7-8 VACANCY: Very close in, 3 room unfurnished house Phone 3086. 7-8 WELL IMPROVED HOME good district 1 rooms and bath and 2 rooms and bath in above ground basement. Loan appraisal $4000. Will take $1040 for my equity and you assume mortgage of $1760. Phone 3086. 7-8 1 16-FOOT BOAT, Johnson mo tor and trailer, a nice outfit, ready to go, $125. Worth $200. People's Warehouse. 7-8 EQUITY 2 bedroom home, St. Francis Park. Phone 4046. 7-10 FOR SALE Practically new furniture, miscellaneous arti cles, 251 E. Main. 8-10 FOUR ROOM furnished house 7-10 $35, 321 N 6th. ROOFING PAPER Light, me dium and heavy. Priced right. People's Warehouse. 7-8 TWO ROOM well furnished house, 1919 Portland. Dial 4533. After 8, 7308. 3091tf FOR RENT Modern 3 room nicely furnished, hardwood floor, apartment. 54 blocks from Main. Adults only. No pets. References. Rent $35. Call 3461 days or 3727 nights. 7-8 WANTED Buyers for small places. List yours with CHRIS HUCK, 1320 Pleasant. Dial 6470. 7-14 MY OFFICE now at my home 1320 Pleasant Chris Huck. Dial 6470. 7-14 LOST 1 roll 18-inch brown wrapping paper between Pine Street Market and Oregon Food store on Oregon ave nue. Finder please call Peo ple's Warehouse. 7-6 m "1 Opsn I All Saturday I FOR YOUR BOAT (flTPIt) DULUX YACHT WHITE Starts brilliantly white stars whittl I ReiUtt hoi sun.aale water, fumes and "arbor oases. Tough, durable, aaiilr S applied. Dries fast, goes far. Treat your boat to lasting good iookil avast 5 RESTRICT ONS ON TRAVEL IN E (Continued from Page One) Klamath Forest Protective asso- ciatton have been placed In class 2. One of these embraces a large section of land north and north' east of Klamath Falls, extending from Upper Klamath lake to the Swan lake country and bound ed on the north by the Klamath Indian reservation.' Two KFPA areas have been placed in Class 3. Rogue Hirer Rulings The various closures also ap ply to sections of the big Rogue River national forest, which cov ers much of northwestern Klam ath county. Open to recreation- ists, with permits, will be the Mountain Lakes primitive area, Blue canyon, Seven Lakes, Huckleberry mountain, Lake o' the Woods, Fish Lake and Rocky Point, as well as the main high ways, traveled country roads and forest camps. On the other hand, strict clos ure will be applied to an area along Upper Klamath lake in the Rogue forest, preventing fishing in Seven Mile creek, Cherry creek, Rock creek. Three Mile creek and other streams In that district. Persons wishing to enter class 3 areas of the Rogue River for est may register at Pelican Guard station, Cherry creek, Seven Mile, Lake o" the Woods, Dead Indiap Soda Springs, Big Elk ranger station and the Moon Prairie guard station. Fremont Closures Fremont national forest areas affected by the new restrictions were also announced in detail Wednesday. Three Fremont areas are in class 3, where recreational use is permitted after registration. These are designated as the Sil ver Creek area, the Gearhart Chewaucan area, and the War ner mountain area. Registration for entry into these special areas for fishing, hunting, etc., can be made at the nearest forest guard or ranger station where entry is desired. rive f remont forest areas have been placed in class 2, where entry will be permitted for business purposes only and on permit. They are: Silver lake area, Horsegladet Dead Indian area, Grizzly-Lake- view Logging company area, Un derwood-Willow creek area, and South Fremont area. Permits for travel in these areas may be obtained in Bly, Lakeview, Paisley and Silver lake. Permits will be issued only to persons with business in the -area, such as ranchers, grazing permittees, loggers, etc. Where conditions require, travel may be restricted to day light hours In both class 2 and class 3 areas. Maps showing the restricted areas of the Fremont national forest and the Klamath Forest Protective association may be viewed at the KFPA offices on Conger avenue, or at The Herald and News offices. Meeting Called In Eureka Lumber Workers Strike EUREKA, Calif., July 8 UP) An AFL strike committee called special meeting today to con sider the war labor board's charge that the walkout of 1000 lumber workers here violates the national agreement of labor WOODS SEVER IJ.I.1IJ.U L H IJJ.II.I I I I L.L.VI 11 1 IT'S ANOTHER BIG I, HOLD OVER HIT! f Held Over Thru Thursday! ) You'll Laugh Like You've i Never Laughed Before! niAiiflv mm COMING ' . nMlll'Ti2 unions that there shall b no strikes for the duration of the war. The board, in a tolegrum to the AFL Lumber and Sawmill Workers union. Local 2592, said it would not consider the merits of the dispute as long as the strike continues, and added: "The board expects that loyal and patriotic citizens the employes of this company will immediately end this strike and return to work." Demanding a union shop and wage increases, the lumbermen struck Monday morning and saw mills of the Hammond Lumber company at Samoa and Eurck closed down. BOARD CALLS FOR 1-B A call for Class 1-B volunteers for induction in August was is sued tooay by Klamath county selective service headquarters. The office said that because only a small number of 1-B men throughout the state will be called for Induction in August, it is not intended to call upon every board in the state to fur nish a proportionate share of the total 1-B call. It is intended, however, the office said, to place a call upon every local -board which has Class 1-B registrants who wish to volunteer for induc tion. The draft office said that 1-B registrants passed at the Port land induction station as meet ing 1-A standards will be ac cepted for general military ser vice, those passing as 1-B's will be inducted for limited service and those failing to meet either standards will be disqualified for service. Those accepted will be en titled to a 14-day furlough after acceptance, so that necessary business affairs will be disposed of. The local draft office said that 147 men were listed on Board 1 1-B rolls and 200 on Board lists. Armed Guards Guarantee Secrecy at Trial (Continued From Page One) ner and manned guns set up in some instances on trucks. From there, the prisoners were taken by guarded and secret elevators to the fifth floor area where the trial is being held In what nor mally Is a federal bureau of In vestigation class room. .- The eight defendants, all Ger man-born, though two had ac quired American citizenship be fore the war, face a swift, unap pealable decision. President Roosevelt barred all civil courts to them in a proclamation last week. The commission will do clde, by votes of at least 5 to 2, whether they are guilty, and if so, what their punishment is to be. A formal accusation alleging four violations of the laws of war and the articles of war each carrying the death penalty has been filed with the com mission by the prosecutors, who are headed by Attorney General Francis Biddle. Biddle's office said he had cancelled all engage ments for the next 10 days. The defendants are George John Dasch, 39, leader of the group of four which landed near Amaransett, Long Island, on June 13; Edward John Kerling. 33, leader of the group of four which landed near Jacksonville on June 17, and these others: Ernest Peter Burger, Herbert Hans Haupt, Henry Harm Helnck,' Hermann Otto Neubau er, Richard Quirin and Werner Thlel. FRIDAY SWELL HITS!! i LI PHILLIPS HOT GDM8AT HAGE5 ALONG MR COURSE (Continued from rage One) Rzhcv front west of Moscow were reported today by tho Ger- mim high command. Russian counter-attacks north- west of Voronezh failed, but tho Russians continued to attack to the northwest In the Orel sector after being repulsed in fierce fighting Unit brought strong Ger man aerial forces into use, a communique said. (The general picture as de- scnuctt oy tno nazis thus por trays tho Germans as broaden ing the spearhead they have thrust from Kharkov and Kursk about 120 miles eastward to Vor onezh and 300 miles south of .Moscow, while tho Russians are doggedly countcr-attuektng on tho north and northwest flank In an effort to smash through and cut off the advanced German forces. (Rzhev, where the nazls claim to have encircled largo Russian forces, is on tho upper Volga river and a railway 130 miles west of Moscow, on a front where the nnzis long have held bulge during a comparatively quiet period.) JOE BLIKENSi Joe Blankenship, 46, was sen tenced to two years In prison and paroled when he appeared before Circuit Judge Dnvld R Vandcnberg Wednesday. He was sentenced on two In dictments chnrglng ho obtained money under falso pretenses. Blankenship was arrested re cently in California, where he was a guard at the Maro island navy yard. First arrested about two years ago in Arizona, Blankenship es caped from Otto Langslct, spe cial deputy sheriff from Klam ath county, who had been sent south to get him. Ho disappeared in San Francisco. He related his story of the os- capc to officers here, assorting he drove away from a hotel with Bn acquaintance. The next day n Keno, he saw a newspaper account of his escape. Read The Classified Pag r 1 25c ANY TIME! IOoorc Opn at liS LAST DAY! arton MacLAHEl Gltnda FAFREUL 1 2nd Big Hitl I TART: OMORROW! 2 Hits You'll Cheerl FRAWKIE HAS A DATE : TO BE MITRnrprni RITA HAYWORTH DOUG FAIRBANKS, JR. Thomas Mitchell In OVER mm GaHS . ' . 1 TEW OUT OF 1 LOCK 2nd WMy-. f "' Ac Trtl Stations Will Clost for Final Rubber Clean-Up (Continued from Psae One) was checking with Portland In n effort to find If the order ex tonda to this city, Snoduruaa aln rnvesled (hat tho city's acrap rubber tolul as of Inst night was 420,000 pounds. 30,000 pounds short of tho 4S0,000-pound goal set when presidential proclamation ex tended tho drivo to July 10. Ho said attainment of tho goal would requlro all-out coopera tion by every citizen between now and Friday at midnight. Meanwhile at toast 2000 pounds of tho needed 30,000 was believed to havo bean found with discovery of a mound of casloff tires In the Klumnth river can yon west of Keno. Recovery of the bonanza constitutes a prob lem, but efforts are being made to bring them to road level for transportation into tho city. SUB WAR TOTAL RISES TO 3451 (Continued Prom Pag On) cd States which Germany has de clared a blockade zone. The Argentlno authority said that In the future Arttt-int inn shins would dock ins torn. U. S. ports in the Gulf of Moxlco. Dutch Craw Lands At an eastern nnrt in nl t crew members of the Dutch car eo vessel sunk in tha CnHhhnm, told how their ship was torpe doed without warning on the night of May 12. Hendrlk Bos, 23-year-old third engineer, said the crew crowded into a life boat and made 400 miles in six days bofora they were picked up by a U. S. mer chant ship. Grass Fir The fire depart ment was called out at 2:03 o'clock Tuesday afternoon to ex tinguish a grass fire at 250 Del ta street, preventing any dam age from being done. An early morning call to 224 Muln street on Wednesday proved to be a false alarm. This was a Salesman Now, he is a private in the field artillery. He enlisted for the duration of the war. The salesman is gone. The car's tires are gone. Gasoline is scarce. The salesman's boss has put this car in storage. The salesman, the tires the car lacks, the gasoline the car is not burning, all are help ing to win the war. But how does the salesman's boss reach his customers? Newspaper advertising helps to take the place of the salesman and his car Advertisements carry his boss' message to his customers. They cannot do all that the salesman did, of course, but by carrying these messages quickly and economically they are doing a port of his job, and will make the salesman's job easier and better for him when he comes back from the war. HERALD and NEWS MEMBER, THE NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS COMMUTES Charles R. Leonard. 0(1, wus found dead Tuesday evening on the sidewalk Just out.-.lclu the back door of his two-room cabin at B07 S. Fourth street. The ver dict of Dr. George II. Adlrr, cor oner, was that he hud dlod of stomach hemorrhage. Leonard was noticed about S o'clock sitting In a chair besldo his back door by a neighbor, L. E. Luce. At 0:30 another neighbor, L, W, Akors, uw the man stretched out on I ho side walk and nssumcd Hint ho was asleep, When ho saw him again a llltlo nftur 7 o'clock In the same position, ho became alarmed end Investigated, find ing blood on the man's face. Po lice were Immediately called to the scene, Leonard came to Klnmath Falls on June 30 from Chlco, The story is fold that the. Chinese pay th doctor to keep them well, and If they con tract lllnoss, tho doctor pays them Instead. Whether or not this story Is true, th gen eral Idoa Is sound. Serious Illness can of ten be prevented by regular health exam inations. Form tho habit of visiting your doctor often at loost twice o year. If you do not hove a family physician, w will b glad to recommend several from whom you can make your selection. CURRIN'S FOR DRUGS "Th Sth and Main This was the Salesman's Car Jrf Calif., and was on a pension as disabled war veteran, On person wer found 14.20 In vnr, dollar watch and two keys. Tha body was removed to Ward's Klamath Funeral horn. Egypt Situation Holds Attention Of War Council i (Continued from Pag On) Ing In Egypt, at least for th time being, and they took en couragement from that. Walter Nash, New Zealand' minister to the United States, told reporters tha council stud ied Just what was happening In Egypt, adding: "The situation Is, we're hold ing, and that is good. I do not know whether It Is permanent,' but It Is Infinitely better thaiv it was fortnight ago." 9) Her On Business P. S. Proulx, traveling chief dispatch er for the Great Northern rail road, wus In the city on business Wednesday. Friendly Drug Store" Phon 4S14 3)