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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1942)
Boptcmbrr 29, 11MJ PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Li 'i 'il m NO SHORTAGE OF COAL, SAI 1NEIRKERS WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 W John L. Lewli said today that member of the United Mine Worker of America would ac cept longer work week only If It was proven conclusively that tt was "absolutely necessary and ' essential" to the war effort. ' The president of the big coal miners' union made the state ment at a conference of labor and mine representatives called by Fuels Coordinator Ickes to consider ways to increase coal production next year. Wastem Need Lewis added that he thought the meeting called by Ickes was without authority to act on a proposal for increased hours and added "there is no material on this table" to Indicate the neces sity for increasing the work week beyond the present 35 hours. u Eugene McAuliffe, president of the Union Pacific Coal com d pany of Omaha, Neb., told the conference the west faced a se vere coal shortage. He pro posed a 48-hour work week. No Shortage Before the conference met to hear Ickes say that lengthening " of the work week was "impera wve," the UMW had declared " "there is no present shortage of B coal and none in prospect." The declaration appeared In the UMW official journal short K ly before the opening of a meet T ing of representatives of coal producers and labor to "give lm- mediate attention" to Ickes' pro posal for "increasing the hours " of labor in the mines beyond the 'present 35-hour week limita- tion." Ickes is the solid fuels co , ordinator. "Adding Machine Boys' ! ""The coordinator estimated r that 560,000,000 tons of bitumi nous coal and 58,000,000 tons of -anthracite would be needed dur ing 1942 and 600,000,000 tons of bituminous coal and 60,000,000 tons of anthracite during 1943. The Miners' publication re corded that the figures were those of the "adding machine boys." Besides, it said, the ad ditional bituminous needs could be produced by mines now work ing only three or four days week ly no extension of the work week would need to be "imposed on the industry as a whole." World Series Broadcast Set NEW YORK, Sept 29 (Wide World) The MBS network has everything all set to begin its fourth year of exclusive broad casting of the world series to morrow afternoon. Time on the air is 11:15 a. m. PWT, 15 min utes before the game, from St. Louis. . The announcing crew will be headed by Red Barber, augment ed by Mel Allen, who is replac ing Bob Elson now in the navy, and Bill Coram. The network, augmenting its regular roster, expects to have 300 stations in this country and Canada for the broadcasts, while the short waves will carry the details for soldiers overseas both simultane ously and by delayed retrans missions from transcriptions. J The apple tree grows more I rapidly than -any other fruit (tree. There's Just as much sense In worrying as there is in advising others not to. If your dealer Is out for the duration, advertise for a used one in the want-ads. Matlnae at 1 :s Riant NUWI ISMS filial Color Cartoon aenehlty oorrrrriy Nftvtltjr - Newi I tmmiwAt&iitpm a t t C 1 OF FIRE... t SA with a ! '1 SCREW y5 vj loose! IMS jtjfcj y-'m vr -.IT M, IYMi MMi ' i I 1W Stop No place for pleasure driving" ta the meaning conveyed by edge of the grimly disputed Alamein front by Australian troopers. Betnlar Army 3 ana Natieaal Ooaida WORLD WAR I SEPT. 1939 By now the rapidly expanding U. S. wartime Army has passed the peak of World War I and fs beaded' beyond 4,500,000 by the end of this year to a probable 10,000,000 next year. Through the induction ot selectees and the calling to active -duty of national guardsmen and reservists, the Army has grown in three years from below 800,000 (regular Army in 1938) to its present high mark. . EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) grandmother's face. She wears metal-rimmed spectacles. If she had a cookie Jar standing beside her, it wouldn't seem out of place, even in this orderly bed lam of riveting hammers, sput tering, blinding welding arcs and towering electric cranes. Her helpers complete their readying of the weld, then freeze to attention like well-trained bird dogs pointing a quail. She drops to one knee, on which she wears a leather pad. Her welding outfit goes into ac tion. The arc spits blue-green light. Her hands, one gripping her welding tool and the other the bonding wire, are as steady and as efficient as If she were crimping the edge of an apple pie instead ot doing her part in the building of a ship to put a crimp in the Japs and the Ger mans. ' The job done, she rises, with out a motion lost anywhere, and stands again at ease while her helpers ready another weld. . pHESE womenl We Americans (news editors, cameramen and all) have been doing our darndest for a couple Coy Hyacinth Hippo is waiting htr cue to go on stage for her part in the batty burles que ballet which is a high spot in slapstick in Walt Disney's new feature, "Fantasia." 'art i 0 "3Sif:.. V f.,.... ,ii it ;). ,,. .,.. Eitl. Wall Dlfnir'a "FAHTASIA" in Taehnloolor Open SUNDAY At Tha Beyond Lies No Man's . 'xzti or- r r m - ... IS. . I tJWI'XiI.Iil SEPT. 1941 DEC. 1942 of centuries fo make fluffy play things of them, but every now and then an emergency comes along, such as fighting Indians on the border, or crossing burn ing deserts to make homes in a new land, or building ships to fight Japs and Germans, and overnight they knock our fluffy plaything concept into a cocked hat and take their places beside the best of their men, bending their backs to the stiffest of the toil, until the emergency passes. You can't lick a country whose women are like thatl It is impossible for liberty to die in the country of its birth. from where it spread all over the world. Edouard Herriot and Jean Jeanneny, leaders of pre-Vichy French Parliament, in Joint in dictment of Petain-Laval regime. k ' , Cntlnuoua Today I and Tomorrow I i II LAST DAY! ! !' i ' Humphrey Bogart (' "The Return MI of Dr. X" 11;; 'I I "Sinners in il !!k ! i Paradise" ! ! I1 ! WITH A HUOI CASTI . , I i; TOMORROW! i; j; 2 Big Treats! ft I J 'I ROWDY ROMANCE ? w a rune 1 1 . WITH i ' ' " JOEL McCREA AN0REA LEEDS ) I H(wt Vs ?,',','.'.'," jjjg? I Land this brief warning placed on the (Passed by British censor.) BY END OF NEXT YEAR We must solemnly resolve that in the future we will not tol erate the economic evils which breed poverty and war. John G. Winant, ambassador' to England. The right of a people to their freedom must be recognized, as the civilized world long since recognized the right of an indi vidual to his personal freedom. Undersecretary of State Sum ner Welles. Stale air is said to be actually injurious. Yet the kid next door goes right on practicing it. Look At This! 2 GREAT FEATURESI Start TODAY! I 1 AND!- If.aHEART-TIKGLfflG. TANGLE, when Andnf Jackson lakes hand in 1 Modem Romance! 4 rr.a jriiu y,'i,;gC;T bora of btttlt! 3&YiJS' Hevti before pm? rl,w,1, itsut S . 7 r I ANKSAV! , ' f I L OF DIVIDEND By VICTOR EUBANK NEW YORK, Sept. 38 (JT Santa Fe was the star stock market performer today, jump ing around three points to an other five-year peak as direc tors pulled a real surprise on Wall street with a $3.50 divi dend declaration for this trans portation leader. The best most prognosticators had locked for in the .way of a Santa Fe disbursement was $1.50 on the common. Hesitancy in most groups was apparent at the opening and, in the final hour, the direction generally remained moderately foggy. Transfer were in tho neighborhood ot 400,000 share j. Today's Santa Fe vote put dividends for the calendar year at $8 per share. Officials said that the board's action must in no way be assumed as estab lishing a precedent and that fu ture declaration would depend on earnings,1 cash and immedi ate and prospective require ments of the company. Given an occasional lift were Pittsburgh Coal common and preferred, Pennsylvania Coal, Distillers Corporation, American Smelting, Du Pont and North American. Backward most of the time were U. S. Steel, Beth lehem, Chrysler, Public Service of N. J., United Aircraft, Kenne cott, Texas Co., and Woolworth. Speculative railway bonds tilted forward In the loans sec tion. Closing quotations: American Can -..-... 861 Am Car & Fdy ...... 24 Am Tel & Tel -..118! Anaconda 251 Calif Packing 18 Cat Tractor 35 Comm'nw'lth & Sou 732 General Electric . 271 General Motors - 38! Gt Nor Ry pfd 23 Illinois Central 71 Int Harvester 48 Kennecott 30 Lockheed . 20 J Montgomery Ward 301 Nash-Kelv 6 N Y Central 01 Northern Pacific .. 61 Pae Gas & El 10i Packard Motor 2 Penna R R 221 Republic Steel 14 Richfield Oil 71 Safeway Stores . 38 Sears Roebuck 541 14! 31 3! 41 121 801 461 Southern Pacific Standard Brands . Sunshine Mining . Trans-America .... Union Oil Calif Union Pacific U S Steel Warner Picture 51 ARATON UPS SANTA FE NEW TODAY! 2 ACE ATTRACTIONS! POSITIVELY PROPHETIC! it's so Timely! life and love aton CtlW tne name-seared fr?,v V ... . I' ' nnnaa. ttA.ita t 'i )lnlc on ' mm i rmA. 2nd Mighty Hit! THE REAL STORY OF THE MAN WHO DIDN'T WANT to be PRESIDENT ...IN A PICTURIZATIOM OF THE FAMOUS PLAY THAT NO AMERICAN SHOULD MISS1M Raymond MASSEY GENE LOCKHART RUTH GORDON Mory ,t in LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 28 ().(Federl-Stoto Mar ket News Service) Cattle: sala ble 2S0. Steady, quality plain; Monday top 007 lb. grass me dium steers $13.00; today two loads common 850-050 lb. steers $11.00-50, sorted $10.50; medi um to good heifers $11.00-50; medium aned cows S9.0n-7. common $8.00-50, cutters $7.50 75; bulls $9.50-10.00. Calves: none. Hogs: salable 300, around 20c higher, one loud good to choice 188 lb. Orcgons $18.00, new re cent high; bulk good 185-235 lb barrows and Kills $15.75-85; odd good sows $13.75. Sheep: salable 500. Active, undertone steady; good to ctiolco lambs scarce, quoted $13.00-50, package shorn medium to good lambs $12.00-50; medium to choice ewes quoted $4.50-5.00. PORTLAND, Ore., Srpt. 20 (AP-USDA) CATTLE; Snloble 200, total 250; calves: salable 85. total 75; market about steady; few medium steers $11.00-12.00. common grades down to $0.00 with cutters down to $7f50; com mon to low medium beef heifers $8.00-10.25, somo held higher; canner and cutter cows mostly $5.00-8.00, fat dairy type cows $6.50-7.00 with heavy Holstelns to $7.50, medium beef cows $7.75 to $8.50; common to medium bulls $8.0010.2-5; good to choice vealers $14.00-15.00. HOGS: Salable 300, total 350; market active, mostly 10 cents below Monday's evernKe, top 15 cents off; good to choice 175-215 lbs., $14.65-75, fow $14.85, me dium grades $14.50 down; 230 200 lbs., mostly $14.00: light lilihUi $13.65-14.00; good sows 300-500 lbs.,- $12.75-13.25: good to choice feeder pigs $14.00 15.00. SHEEP: Salable 500, total 1000; market about steady but very slow on cull and common ewes and lambs; few good spring lambs $11.50, feeders . $0.00-50, light cull lambs downward to $6.00, good shorn lambs $10.25, common yearlings $7.00; load feeder ewes 111 lbs., $3.00, good slaughter ewes salable $4.00 to $4.50, culls down to $1.00. BOSTON WOOL BOSTON, Sept. 20 (AP-USDA! The Boston wool market was a little less active today. Prices continued steady. Some north ern California original bog wool was sold at clean basis prices of $1.10. New Mexican fine stnplo wools were sold at grease prices of $1.18-1.20 and French comb ing wools sold at $1.14-1.18. A small lot of scoured low quar ter blood wool sold at 97 cents, Poverty is not inevitable any more. The sum total of the world's greatest possible output divided by the sum total ot the world's inhabitants no longer means a little less than enough for everybody. It means more than enough. War Production Board Chair man Donald M. Nelson. FREE PARKING! .. , - .li M . . . I V wptn at . if! p. m, I t ) fl II Dim ir ii - a II II. U' -a'' 5 WV m mm ..rr:';,",J.",.' Joe James Custer. UP Pnelno lire! correspondent, rocuprratca at an advance base hojpilnl dom lnjurli's received In Sulumans battle. ' Two U. S. Army nunoi are shown with him. (1'bmoJ by Army cenior.) 51G ON SF M'RKET SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 20 (P) The livestock market mode good prophets today of those observers who said In midsum mer that hogs would sell for $16 a hundred pounds on tho hoof before tho end of Septem ber. Oregon hogs hit $18 today and in so doing set a now high record for tho lust 16 years. Prices went up about 20 cents per cwt. from yesturduy's levels. Cattle and sheep prices held even. . POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20 (AP-USDA) Potatoes: 0 Califor nia, 14 Orciion, 18 Idaho arrived, ono cur arrived by truck, 28 bro ken, 73 unbroken cars on track; slightly weaker tendency; Klnm nth Russets No. 1, $2.73-3.10. mostly $3.00-3.10; No. 2s, $2.00 2.25; mostly $2.10-2.13; no Idaho quotations. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 21) (AP USDA) Potatoes: 8 California. 10 Idnho arrived, 8 diverted, 23 broken. 83 unbroken cars on Irnck; 11 cars arrived by truck; No Oregon quolnllons; Idaho Jlusscts, No. 1, $2.00-2.63. f CHICAGO. Sept. 20 (AP USDA) Potatoes, arrivals 07, on track 180: total U. S. shipments 043; supplies moderate, demand fair, market steady; Idaho Russet Burbanks, U. S. No. 1. $2.73 to $3.00; Minnesota and North Da- FENDS TONIGHT!! Cary Grant Jean Arthur i'TUC Till of i nt I hui THE OUT OF THFSE TI.MFS il -- - - - A THOUSAND STORIES Wilt rb dadl , r 1 lr - LI Mmir rvurr .lory ot ,Cay ffy ' , kL XHJL EDI l lht Man Wha Com To 0nf'l fTn "er.an Vallf" toy) MONTY RODDY McDOWALL fa ANNt DAAItK , Otto Premlnger J. Carrol Nalsh P rWHMf aaai wiMta fat M (irna NUNNAILY JOHNSON tumtmtr IRV.INO PICHEl ftfitCLjL h 'fiiw-. WkitlQzSmi " Portland Produce I'OltTLANn, lr.. A'l't. M (AI')-TIim il lim lU' MftlloH y whoWileft, . (lit ulier otliaWwU" H" tr.lt llMTT KH I'rint. A fl. l In t""h ntriit winner, 6lo In curium j H ii, tVM In lufrlniimt wriflr' l" ,M"tn. llii n MiFAT -First 'inaiitf, uiBtltiiuid n . of 1 r cut, itlihtr iMhvfxl In itu Uhil, itaj'ic lli.j (tfr m huii tiiilll, in. Imtiin f U of I ( vtnt n.in. &jm'v Iti.j vlly hltn ttntl tMinlty ilnli u ttit titan llrl ot 4V)'I aualiiy I'oltlaitil l urt.ln (It ll f (Ml I. jr. tllKI-ft'illnt irlc I't I'urlUhil r. Ulltrii 1IIUmok IllflrU, lift Hi. dial. lb.; Ii (plot to riosMlia, IW It. 1 Wv lb. f. O. It. IHUmtl.. Ktlim-I'ti.' lu piotliirvrii A Urg. IAt it lifK-, oo t A t "limn, ton lli.t n timj. I ii lit. M ilniPH. hial trt rUllr( 4 IiiIit dr fttnn to hlilmr. 1.1 vk i'uri.iuv-iiii)i!n iiiir.t No, Himlii I."t(httfil hlltf, I'l lu H lti. BTe mlvfnl ftrra limlxr Itfc lli.( tu-i fl4j iu t- Hi., iwi ntliunt hnns, ut), o.l'tfui rttr$.Ta or 4 M.. f'i lihwtt Ikhi unttor lt Mi., lie i ovr Mt.. toot nlnr4l hu. tlo lb, I No. I tl tivii), 4f No, I gimlt, lri r"tr. t(Wt tit. MUKSKli Tl ltKKVS-(vllin prlc. nr Al-.Kii Hi, it,Hlitl(i-Atr nmiitlrjr kUM. He pt It-. H A V-Jllln pMc on Imrhai alfalfa. N. I, :(, liitii ot vl(li, tla.00 too, tallat ikIuI( tlitiolhy, 1 1 4-00 UM( (lovr, lu.ob lull. ONt(N5-0rn. too tiua bunchi Or H-o tlf). ll.ii l.HJ; U aIU Wall Yaklm .'-Olti. Iaj I'lckim In b. Ml Aini:v- Klainnlh MO wntalj Yakima. U.tf JWl Itlahti, tU( tuval, J wBUl. COlMitV II.ATA-Klllri flM tft r UHtii ntiinlo llld h", bl bglchtra, llll to U lb tlo; vaai, faner. Wi lb.) KkxI havy, id lie lh. iotih h4y, A.a . I cimr , to lb.) nttri4 1IH II. . litilU, 14 lih) lit. tll" la (Kin, rt'i jtarllng lainlx, HtMut, a b, ilu hvji lb. WM, IW lb. WHEAT CHICAGO, Sept. 20 W) Grain prices drifted within narrow ranxe today, traders ox-W hlbltlnK caution In view of tha possibility that tlio senate would vote on the anti-Inflation bill somo time durlnil the day. No volo was taken while the ninrkot was In session, however. The smote voto was expected to reveal tha strength of the farm bloc In Its efforts to force a revision in tho method of calcu. luttnil parity. Moat of the Wash InRton news indicated the farm bloc would not be successful, and there was little Inclination to buy In view of thst prospect Rye provided some Interest at one time, staitlnx a technical ral ly following yesterday's break as shorts covered, but the advance ran Into selllnu and prices barky, ed down to around the precedln&9 session's close. Wheat closed ie lower to la hlnher, December $1,271-1, May $1,301-1; rye was unchanged to 1c blither and soybeans ad vanced 1-1 cent. Census flguri show there are 303,321 occupants of mental In stitutions In tha United Slatm. kola miss Triumphs, V. S. No. t $2.10-33; Cobblers. U. S. No. I $2.08-13; Wisconsin ' Ullw Tr umphs, U. S. No. 1, $2.18-30. Ronald Colman rtiaiii ivjwn STARTING TOMORROW! wwrMi BUT NONE GREATER THAN THISI A mighty novel now on the screen gripping you with Its power yet misting your eyes with emotion, memorable In Its story, but equally brilliant In its portrayals, and un- lorgoiraoio ror its ricn, warm humor. - n t WOOLtEYi - t la.IH.jl ..MAMA .-.j . '"". SMJ.r'aOlj.M..,. mI - ialli - all Ta i .- ' i r mm i Pelican Extra Brevity News