PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON AiUfunt 22. 194S VKANK JCKKIHD - NAtcoLM spiiy tmt Maaaflag Editor A temporal, conblnttloe of ta Bwrni Harald aad tha SlamaUl lja. hbuaa4 ann lUmoe. notrrt Bunda; at Eaplanada ud Pln alrwta, hlnmith Falli, Onira, J tht llmM fuKlittilm Co. and tria KlanaUi PuolUbm CVMipacjt. ISilbCNtf ill awuotf rnwr al th. poaioiiica oi &iaoiaui raiia. Ore, OB Anauti so, IK uodr act of oopgma. March , lira. Uimtxr of Tha Aiaooalad Praia tho Auocuted Praaa n tidoalralT aolltlad to tha ou of roolkalrt of-all tmn tfMtda aadllad to II at not othafwlM eradltd to Oila papw. and tlM tea loeal ea poolUhM Unrala. AH rlihf of ttpuMKatio. of aparial diapulriwa an alto ruarrad. Mk'UBEB AUDIT fifJRKAD Of CIBCl'lATIQH Brpreaenttd Nationally by Waat-HoUlda; Co, foe. ... . trmatn. Xaw ink, Datrolt. faul. Cbloaro. tVutlaod loa Aonlaa. St. IxMlfc VibomntT BY C Coolaa of Th. Buald and Saw. totatfcar wild eoaplaU , talonoaUoo bSlili" Klamath fall market, mtj ba obUlned for Ida at any of Ua olllcaa. " . , . .. . Dallvartd 6j Carrier to City u..' ' i Thrio Hoothe f-5 Or.. Taar i 1 f MAIL BATES CAVABLB l.N ADVANCB Bj Mali II tlamito. Lata. Modoa ud Blattroo OocnUee V Weekend Roundup THE current series of articles appearing in tins newspaper, i showing how Klamath's industrial activities have been tuned to the war effort, prove that we do have important war industries here, large and small, and that they are doinjr their part effectively. Here we are building grain bins to help meet a serious grain storage problem of countrywide scope. Here we are making thousands of screens for pre-fabricated houses at an ordinance depot in Utah. Here we are turning out mil lions of feet of lumber for war uses. Here we have in the siskin" one of the basin's finest crops, to go into "food for fighting." Here we have machine shops working on navy contracts and other war jobs. Here we have a big trans portation lay-out doing its part to keep the materials of war moving. "' Men and women of the Klamath country engaged in these activities, must find gratification in the knowledge that they are playing an important part in the war pro gram, that whatever they do to promote efficient produc tion, industrial tranquillity, and cooperative endeavor, is a real contribution, regardless of whether it is acclaimed in public' speeches, or the public press., Likewise, those who supply goods or render services to these busy people, are doing a job that is essential. We know1 here that while there are no military instal lations in'the community, we are not sitting off to .the side, getting along on our own without participation in a big war effort going on elsewhere. We are in this thing in a way that counts. " '"' ' . '. At the same time,, we who live and work here are en joying certain comparative advantages over those who have crowded into the big centers. The other day, 'this newspaper carried a story telling of the difficult housing conditions existing in those coastal centers. Nothing-Jf the kind confronts us here, a place where there is plenty of room to live and move about, where life is a fairly normal affair, where schools are not crowded and goods and services are still easily available to all. :,. - Those who live, here in this war period are enjoying a pretty favorable combination of circumstances. - Streamlined to meet Wartime conditions, the. Klamath county junior livestock show will be held Monday. This is the 1942 edition of the fall shows of past years that have been featured by the exciting auction sale and the high prices for prime stock grown by juniors of the Klam ath basin. - Important differences this year will be the' elimination of the auction, judging of cattle on a group basis, and limit ing the-show-to-a-single day. - Instead of the open auction, sealed bids are being taken on the championship stock. Champion groups of four or five individual animals will be chosen in the steer, hog .and lamb divisions. All of .the stock, it is expected, will be sold somewhat above market prices, with the com petitive bidding applying to the champion groups. While there will be no auction to draw the crowds, we suggest to local people that they make it a point to visit the, junior livestock show Monday, to see the fine stock grown by the youngsters of this basin. The affair will be held at the county fairgrounds. ,: ! '.- ' - Work, fight or go to jail is the warning which Acting Police Chief Earl Heuvel has issued to shiftless transients and habitual . "vags" in this vicinity.. But jail is a little too easy. Something should be done to get the regular inhabitants of the city and county jails into the productive column. The day has passed, too, for handouts to moochers of all sorts. !E?S $50 Fli Ralph Holllngsworth, 20, a Keno lumber worker, was fined S50, $25 ol which, was suspend ed, this morning in police court on. a reckless driving charge growing, out of a freak early morning accident on East Main street. Police said that the Holllngs worth car, travelling east on East Main, failed to make the curve near Mills school, struck the corner of a building at 515 East Main, bounced off a tree in front of a residence at 517 East: Main,' spun around and tore up the lawn, and wound up behind a second tree point ed in the direction from whence It came.' Skid marks for a distance of 120 feet on the pavement were noted by officers. The car, a, light coupe, was badly' damaged and Helling! worth's face and left kneecap cut. 'The driver was alone in car, police said. COFFEE LIMITED ' .WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 OP) The. war production board Fri day ordered a further 10 per cent reduction In the amount of cof fee available , to American con sumers, effective September 1. If your dealer Is, out for the duration, advertise for used one In the want-ads, . ... aw I News Behii By RUL rlALLON WASHINGTON, Aug. 82 It may have sounded a tittle strange when Production Direc tor Donald Nelson returned from his vacation, announcing he was going to get tough about inefficiencies in hi orsnntrii- tion and then .singled out for firing first an employe who had t o I d the n e w s p a p ers about the defi ciencies in 1 ti M To n outsid- IJit er it may have , i 1' ! aaf -rrmrrl remark- Paul Mallon able that Mr. Nelson started improving his organization by canning an em ploye who told the public one thing wrong with it. But that was not exactly the situation. The overall truth is the war production board has been load ed with a motley assortment of soma legitimate businessmen, some business hangers-on, or what you iiilgiti call "marginal businessmen" (those unsuccess ful men from commercial life who have made a career out of government service for the last few years), and a formidable array of new deal social re formers, as well as expert, clear-headed, capable econo mists and officers from other government departments. The variety of interests rep resented by these conflicting groups has inspired constant in ternal turmoil. One of the favorite triclts of these marginal businessmen, or reformers, is to concoct a per sonal report setting forth his own views as to what is wrong, and then to leak same to the newspapers as a conclusion of the war production board, or at least matte: under study there, , ;. , : , This had to be stopped first, and Mr. Nelson's choice of a victim was apparently a con structive effort to breakup that practice, whethor or not it was properly applied in that' case. - Next step will be to cleanse the house of the marginal busi nessmen and reformers, and put the selection of personnel there on a non-political efficiency- rating basis. Some of them may be taken into the army and navy. WPB rolls contain an exceptionally large number of single men without dependents, and mar ried men with rich or working wives, and they are in the aga bracket of the lower thirties which makes them suitable for practical military effort. . AGREEMENT Mr. Nelson is being criticized by the new deal element, in and out of his organization, tor not straightening out his relations with the army and nuvy witli a clear-cut agreement as to au thority. Actually he entered such an agreement In writing last March 12. The memo then adopted by him and army and navy au thorities was not made public at that lime, but he apparently told the Truman investigating committee about it. llndor this aureemcnt memo, he gave the armed services four powers: (1) Direct authority to work out production schedules: ; (2) Authority to re-negotiate contracts; (3) Power over plant con struction. And (i direction oi purchasing procedure. This left his WPB with con trol over, allocating materials between military and non-military users, but gave most other responsibility for fulfillment of the program to the army and navy. If the argument now expands over who is to be the "goat" for any failure to meet produc tion schedules, this overlooked memo is likely; to play an im portant part. 'oi itial steps already being taken as well as the popular com ment aro veering away from that dangerous, delaying and possibly disastrous trend of goat finding, and toward a real istic solution of the actual prob lem which Is to locate the raw materials and get them to the right places. AID FOR THE REDS The Churchill-Stalin conver sations were no doubt concerned primarily with the problem o British and American supplies for Timoshenko's Caucasus army now retreating Into the moun tains. While the problem of the sec ond front is lively in public discussions and in morale-building propaganda . efforts, it is purely a military one not to be decided by Churchill and Stalin. ' But what Churchill could well have' gone to Moscow to talk about is how he and the Americans might be able to sustain Timoshenko through the winter if he will hold the top of the Caucasus. There he would be cut off from Russia proper, but acces sible to the British and to us via the Iran rail line from the Persian gulf and by plane from Egypt. We could send not only rfnaterials, but troops. GOLDEN WEDDINGB7 ST. LOUIS (P) Mr. and Mrs. F. U. Hugunin, 92 and 98 years old, respectively, will celebrate quietly their 70th wedding anniversary today. WAR QUIZ 1. This Insignia was worn by the Dixie Division, which as sembled - at Camp Wheeler, Macon, Ga., in World War I. The Insignia Da stands for the Initials of the organ iza tion's nickname What division? 2. What is the difference be tween O.D. and o.d.? 3. If a sailor tells you he's been eating "shivering Liz in the snow," what does he mean? ANSWERS TO WAR QUIZ 1. It is the insienia nt tho si. f division. 2. O.D. fin rnnitnlal lanH W officer of the day. In small let ters it means , olive drab, used in connection with Army cloth ing, paint, etc. 3. This is Navy slang for a gelatine dessert with cream, DOUBLE DATE BOISE. Ida. m Ted Turner former dean of men at the Uni versity of Idaho, kept trying to get into the war and now look! Rejected in his quest for an army commission, he tried the navy. He was refused again. Now, in the same mall, he s received notices that both his army and navy commissions have been granted and will he please report for duty. Last Times Tonight - 2 First-Run Pictures William Oarewt-Margaretundj L A TOSICMAS OPENING SUNDAY First Klamath Falls Showing Scatterbrain Judy's Here Again! SHE'S GOT THE CAMP A-STAMPIN' with HER JIVIN' and HER VAMPIN'! . ao ft1 CnMjXA -y judy CANOVA Ai& rX A V ALLAN JONES fj Lf jANN M'LLER Jw' if J Ik f WIlllAM DIMARIST t :X I I ciar,nci kois psgwjijl lL kA Paramount Pltfuru WITH "LOVE IN GLOOM" . MARCH OF TIME "CRAZY CRUISE" - LATEST WORLD NEWS SIDE GLANCES 511 J i cowi mi iv nr avt. inc. t. m. ate, u. t. fat, err. 8-2'f "Don't notice him nnd he'll stop he always gels restless liko that when it' time for the sandman I" Navy Recruiting Head to Visit Here Lt.-Col. G. F. DeGravo, offl-ccr-in-charge of U. S. navy re cruiting In Oregon, will be In Klamath Falls Sunday on an Inspection tour, the navy re cruiting station announced today. While here, DeGrave will also make preliminary arrangements for a Navy Day celebration, plnmicd for October 27 to coin cide with the birth-date of Theo dore Roosevelt, father of the modern U, S. navy. GLAMOUR, AIN'T HAY HOLLYWOOD (,V) The farmer's wife, Mrs. George Zarzana of Rural Roosevelt, won't bo able to appear with Movie Actor Henry Fomta in that radio show after nil. Both are airplane spotters, and were assigned roles In a script called "Eyes Alott." Farmer Znrznnn telephoned NBC and said Hint was fine but his wife had to help with the hay crop. You'll Be Doing Rubberless Rubber-necking Before Long : WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 W All "rubbernecking", alter Sopt 10 must bp dons without rubber. llromtonlng un rarllur order prohibiting "sightseeing by bus," defined as any rubber-tired ve hicle with a capacity of 10 or more piissonuors, the office of defense trniwpnrtnttun Friday imulo it applicable to "any rubber-tired vehicle propelled or drawn by mechnnlnil power, for hire or under hire." Under the extended order, tnxicabs no longer can pick up passengers "whose only Interest in ciiKngliiK Hie vehicle l tt go for a siiilitsoctiiK ride." Drivo yourself automobiles cannot bo rented to parties "merely wishing to tnko a rub berneck trip." Pj.i.t,t.w rjvned crs must not bo offered for hire or rented for sightseeing purposes. PEL! Lasf i imes t onight ""Vntft 1 Artsm v o'ltmiviN M ik.llliU Th ODT reported that In Bos Ion horse drnwn carriages of (ho vinliiKu of 1!!"0 hnva be-on resur rected so Unit visitors may con tlnuo to vlll historic .places. Lot's put everything to workl Sell the articles you don't list through u classified nil. RflmGOiii Ends Tonight FIRST Jeffroy Lynn Jono Wymon EJworii EVvroif Mwrlun In "THE BODY DISAPPEARS' SECOND rill EDDIE fhWlttm- ALBERT llr'BtrflU,'' Peggy MOHAN COMING SUNDAY Ray Miliaria1 Akim Tamiroff "Untamed" AND Bing Crosby Ned Sparks In 'Star Maker' , (Road CIowHUd Adt lor BotulU KW--1 1J STARTING SUNDAY Four Big Days! , PAGAN HEARTS... PRIMITIVE LOVE;:. PULSATING THRILLS ; AWAIT YOU! - Queen of fh tropics flndi T a new lungle mote hondtorpe .. n Richard Donning ccntwjtoil mm , ' y starring DOROTHY LAMOUR ith , Richard Denning ' Jack Haley 1 'vWaVIM t,&64f4z&&, JlMl'iV. M'aiaM lir '. ADTtDf!. .j i ' . jjjj- Four Big Days'. wl ' 1 1 "-St I-"".-' N Jf first 1 ;J A S .ist -jp '' ' I f Pfm 1 WT ..BBBBBMH- rT "STRANGER THAN FICTION' "DONALD'S GOLD MINE" ALL THE LATEST NEWS 'aV' A'w,4 fcWVS fr'7?vW. 'I. t-f J I Th. Wild Junala'i Wlld.it ThrllltaiMabok,thwlld Isphant, ehareo hli thundorlng faol rnachlng to eruih the floolng pair, Dorothy and tho hand torn Richard Donning. iiB'.i.-.tAiA'A.ii'iii mfciii ii n jH