Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, April 09, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR .
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH PALLS, OREGON
April 0, 1048
Mmbtr of
Tin Auocuns Pun
TM AuoHtfi tnu ta tielt.
duly mutltd to tli uii of t
publication et til uvl dltpttche
ermd t l or oot othtrain
ertdlUd lo thli Pper. ind !
' Ihl local ncwf publ)hd tharrln.
ill rlfbU of raitubllulloo ol
padil dJipttti" n Uo ra
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
A tmporitT otnMnattoa of th Vvtolnc Itcrtld tnrl
tht Klamath Ntwt. Publufced vry aftrmoon tiw-nl
Hunday t Epliudt fttid Pine itrscti, KUmsth Fa.it,
Oregon, by Uir HrM P-n.l litilng Co. and tha KUmtt
Kewi Publishing Company
Knterfd areond dan matter a tha poatofflc of
Klamath. FalU. Or., on Auguit 10. IM under act ol
ee&crrta. March , 1ST0.
Jtmbr of Accrr
BtmiAV Or Cwculatiox
Raprtaenttd Nationally by
Wur-HoutUAT Co., Ikc
Saa Fnndaoo. New York, It,
attla, Cbicarv IVrtUud, Lo
MALCOLM EPLEY
anntfop Editor
EPLEY
Today's Roundup
Br MALCOLM EPLEY
IT WILL take some vigorous bush-shaking in
the next 20 days to achieve the $1,269,000
quota set for Klamath county's April war fin-
f tnt ance drive.
WT'H-'1'' It cannot be done by the
fprsV'i mere tapping of reserve and
' v 2 "sleeping funds" along with
I T IN C? ' ordinary war savings lnvcst
1 . . I menu. It will require every
available dollar from these
Inrffer funds, nlus Increased
bond buying by every earning
Individual in the county.
The size of the quota, when
it was announced this week,
staggered most of us, of course.
Andy Collier, cc-chairman of the campaign,
rubbed the back of his head in a characteristic
gesture and said: "It's a big job, but we'll
have to do if That's a good way for all of
the earnestly patriotic citizens of the county o
look at It.
. G. c; Blohm, co-chairman with Collier, said
that "the money is here." He went on to state
that it is here In public funds, in various pri
vate and semi-private reserves, both large and
mail, and in the earnings of the people. The
problem is to get it used in government bond
purchases In the next 20 days.
Even with Increased bond buying by the
Vank and file, it would be impossible to make
the goal in the allotted time. But in this drive,
purchases of the larger bonds will count on the
quota. There are probably some funds on the
Indian reservation that will help. .Lodges and
other organizations will be asked to use their
reserve money in this way. City, county and
school district reserve funds can be invested
in government bonds to help achieve the goal.
; There axe 40,000 people in the county; 40,
000 shoulders to the wheel will bring success
in this drive. And that success will bring out
standing credit to the county community.
Country Suggestion
A "COUNTRY WOMAN" writes us a letter
on a subject that deserves attention be
cause it touches on a local shortcoming. She
ays: .
"It seems to me that one thing the rural
population of Klamath county, especially the
women, would appreciate, as much as anything
would be a public rest room. A free rest room,
sponsored by merchants, business men and civic
organizations, and the city as a whole, where .
one could spend an hour or two resting or .
' waiting; a room' centrally located, where one
could wait, without feeling they were inflicting
themselves on private firms.
"Many times persons from the rural district
plan to spend the day In Klamath Falls, prob
ably with one appointment in the morning and
one later In the day. Between times, where
can one stay? ' As the situation is now, after
doing the shopping, there is no place one can
rest, except in the individual business houses.
As tire and gas rationing become more string
ent, this waiting will become much more pre
valent." -- -- --- -
-
Good Project
UR correspondent discusses something that
has not been entirely overlooked locally,
but it is something about which the county seat
community has done nothing.
At one time, we suggested here that some
such place as the American Legion hall be fitted
up as a general gathering place and rest room
for our country visitors.
The Legion hall has been used for something
else, but such a project is a vital need here, as
our correspondent suggests.
Klamath Falls depends extensively upon Its
outside trade. Here is something that should
be done, as soon as possible, as a hospitality
measure In behalf of these valuable visitors.
Let's give It some serious thought.
Our Missing Fliers
THE TIMES DISPATCH of Walnut Ridge,
Ark., recently carried editorial mention of
Lieutenant Robert J. Swindle, who was bom
bardier on the Flying Fortress on which our
own Captain Ehle Reber was captain. Lieuten
ant Swindle, like Captain Reber, has been re
ported missing.
No further word, so far as we know, has
been received In this country concerning the
crew of "Jerry Jinx," Captain Reber's great
plane. The Times-Dispatch, as does this news
paper, expresses the prayer that the members
of the crew are prisoners In Germany. There
have been many cases, including those of some
of our Klamath men, where fighting men first
listed as missing in action later were found
to be prisoners.
That they may be alive as prisoners of war,
or alive and making their way out of some
dark land, is a hope we hold in our hearts for
all our missing men.
New state liquor administrator Is Ray Con
way, who has many acquaintances In the Klam
ath country, and hi son. Tommy, used to be
with the highway department here. Mr. Con
way was long the manager of the Oregon
State Automobile association, and more recently
was administrator of the war savings program.
He is able, honest and sincere. We never knew
him to be particularly Interested in liquor, but
we imagine he will do a good job of adminis
tering the business in Oregon.
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, April 9 Mr. Roosevelt has
won his greatest victory over the farm
bloc but at a price that was not officially
9, TJtyirvwm posted.
h V jfv! He succeeded in turning
L- IkWiJ) haxlr lha Unnl-hoi,, Kill J.
laying the Pace bill, and quiet
ing the rampant farm lobby
ists, but the senate allowed
him to do It in such a way
that if he weakens in his fight
SsVj against inflation on other
fronts (the John L. Lewis
miner-wage front, particularly)
these bills can all be called
back and pessed over his veto.
SIDE GLANCES
MALLON
His men did not like this idea of hiding the
Bankhead bill indefinitely as a Damoclean
sword in the senate agriculture committee.
Democratic Floor Leader Barkley worked ar
dently against the motion to send the bill back
to the committee. He wanted a straight-out
vote on whether or not the bill should pass
by a two-thirds majority over the veto.
But the polls showed in advance of the
vote that Barkley could not get his way, or
rather the president's preferred way, because
it may be confidently assumed he was acting
for the White House. Naturally, the president
would like to feel entirely free of this Bank
head threat, to deal on other anti-inflationary
fronts without the threat of future farm
trouble.
Losing Vote Expected
THE farm bloc founa out early that it would
lose. Its poll showed it six votes short of
the necessary two-thirds vote to pass the bill
over the presidential veto under the most fav
orable circumstances possible.
Meanwhile, Democratic Senator Byrd, of Vir
ginia, had assumed inner leadership for the
course which the senate ultimately followed.
He first started to work on the proposition of
sending the bill to the committee.
" This drew away from the bloc Such an" in
veterate farm supporter as Bennett Clark of
Missouri who never before failed to support a
farm measure.
The reasonableness of this attitude was clear
ly stated by Republican Senator Vandenberg.
The president, he argued, had sent a strong
message saying flatly he could not stop inflation
if the Bankhead bill were passed over his veto
The president thus assumed the responsibility
for stopping inflation. ' If the senate passed
the measure, it would take such responsibility
away. Mr. Roosevelt, therefore, should be taken
at his word, should be allowed to try.
The inference, which no one made plain, was
that if the president fails in dealing with
Lewis, or by allowing the OPA to inch prices
up higher and higher, the situation will be
entirely different. The senate then would be
able to draw the bill back from the committee
and rally two-thirds majority for it or some
thing stronger, even the Pace bill.
The White House victory thus really only
gave FDR a chance to have his way if he can.
Ruml Plan Reaction
BLISTERING telegrams, newspaper editorials,
and telephone" calls from back home have
made the house rather sick at heart and sore
in other places after its own action in shunt
ing the Ruml plan and all pay-as-you-go tax
legislation back into the deep well of the
house ways and means committee.
No one seems satisfied, least of all the con
gressmen involved. Some republican legislators
are complaining that it was bad strategy not
to pass some sort of a bill, because the senate
would then have adopted the Ruml plan, and,
after that action, the house hnlght have accepted
' it. This is a matter of debate however as some
senate leaders say a modified Ruml plan could
have been put through, while others disagree.
But sorest of all is the treasury and the
-democratic leadership. It solved nothing. The
treasury wanted a 20 per cent withholding tax
on salaries or the 10 per cent "forgiveness."
High paid war workers are moving around
every few months and income taxes cannot
catch them, but a withholding tax would. Also,
there is a chance that Germany might collapse
suddenly and upset war employment to a point
where war taxes would never be paid.
But, despite all this disappointed reaction
on both sides, no one yet seems to have a
constructive idea as to what to do now. All
are still thinking it over.
IllIP
ti f Ti yr. , z-L
4 fAttc
IV MIA mwcriwc T. W. BtO. u.
"My folks don't think we ought to get married now, but I
tell 'em a fellow needs nn incentive lo work for a gen
eral's job I"
EilaitKsHr.H
Yesterdays
". ., ' i;'v '- : 1 "'!, ).:; : ' -, If i:
From the files 40 ycorj
. ego and 10 yean 030.
Oregon Mews Notes
By The Associated Press
Tacoma's Mayor Harry P.
Cain told a Portland business
men's group that cities should
plan postwar programs for the
conversion of war industries to
peacetime pursuits to take up
the anticipated unemployment
slack . . , Vanport, the war
housing project near Portland,
Which soon will be Oregon's
second largest city, has Its first
business establishment a mar
ket center .... , Mrs. Minerva
Thessing Oatfield, 91, Clacka
mas county pioneer, died at
Oregon City.
The American Economic 'Fed
eration announced that John
McCliment, Eugene, a Univer
sity of Oregon law school Jun
ior, will be one of the four
finalists in a national oratorical
contest . . . The Oregon office
of war information said the war
department needs firemen, po
licemen patrolmen and guards
for duty at Portland and Bend
. . . The Portland city council
authorized the Portland Trac
tion company to begin operation
of a Vanport line May 1.
Decision Next Week
In Cannery Dispute
PORTLAND, April 0 (IP)
A decision on the new 70-cent-an-hour
minimum for Oregon wom
en and minors who work in can
neries will be announced next
week by the regional war labor
board.
The board studied the state
wage-hour commission order
boosting wages from 621 to 70
cents at a meeting here yester
day with the commission.
From the Klamath Republican
April 9. 1903
A. L. Leavitt has moved with
his family to his recently ac
quired place on Conger avenue.
Al says the task of moving
is tremendous shatters the
nerves, produces profanity and
endangers domestic tranquillity.
He says he won't move again.
The town fioard has author
ized proceedings against the own
ers of the irrigation ditch run
ning through town, to compel
them to keep the water in the
ditch and off the strepts and from
soaking and damaging other
property.
Hundreds of trout are being
caught from the river at this
place.
From the Klamath News-''
April 9, 1933
Temperature dropped to 17
above today as Old Man Winter
staged a comeback.
Dave Canfleld, chief ranger at
Crater lake park, will open a
branch office of the park service
in the federal building this
week.
Sheriff E. A. Prlday of Lake
county resigned today.
Maximum Prices Set
For Onions, Spuds
PORTLAND, April 9 ,(&)
Maximum prices of dry onions
and white potatoes of the late
1942 crop for sale during May
and June will be 10 cents above
those for the same commodities
during the month of April, the
OPA said today.
The move is designed tn enrfnri
available supplies evenly over
the next three months.
HOW WONDERFULI BUT
SAN FRANCISCO, (&) Mrs.
Louis Figonl without news of
her husband in the two months
he's snent at sea an a mprphnnt
marine oiler, looked eagerly at
an Associated Press photograph
of him complete with two
months beard.
Her first words:
"Thosp whfslfortt wilt hat,. 4n
come offl" ,
UNEMPLOYMENT
f
TAX REDUCED,
DUE III MONTH
Reduced unemployment tax
rates on 1943 pay rolls arc being
sent this week to 3005 firms, an
increase of D14 over last year,
the State Unemployment Com
pensation commission announced
today. Contributions for the
first quarter are due this month.
The number of employers get
ting the lowest rate of 1 pe cent
nearly doubled, increasing from
580 to 1135. Favorablo employ
ment conditions have resulted in
a steady increase of thoso get
ting reductions from the normal
2.7 tax since experience rat
ing took effect July 1, 1941.
Penalty rates, ranging from 3
to 4 per cent, have not been
assessed since September 30,
1941, when the fund went over
the "6 per cent ceiling." A
steady reduction in the number
of concerns which would have
paid increased taxes has been
noted as unemployment ap
proaches a minimum.
Wi,n all the Victory Gardens,
it looks as if mother is go.ng
lo have a lot to put up with this
year.
Oil pamungs are made on
spider webs by Stella Campin,
iarm woman of Randolph, la.
Mabheti and tymancia
1
0)
SPECULATORS
UNLOAD WITH
PRICE ORDERS
LEGAL NOTICES
BOSTON WOOL
BOSTON. Anrll D fAP.TIcriAl
Sales of Pennsylvania middle
county wools were made at fob
grease prices of tn 5414
cents for clear medium, 48 cents
tor medium rejects and 40 cents
for fine wool. Fine staple 12
ounce Texas wools were sold
at a clean price of $1.18.
Wherever a people is onDress-
ed by hunger, that people is an
easy victim to the theft of its
liberties. Vice President Hen
ry A. Wallace.
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OF MEETING OF
EQUALIZATION BOARD OF
MALIN IRRIGATION DIS
TRICT OF KLAMATH COUN
TY, OREGON.
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Directors of the Malln
Irrigation District of Klumath
County, Oregon will, com
mencing Tuesday, Mny 4. 1043
at the office of the District being
ine jjistrict pumphouse, sit as a
Board of Equalteation for the
purpose of reviewing and cor
recting the assessment roll of the
District for the fiscal year com
mencing July 1, 1043.
M. M. STASTNY,
Secretary.
A. 9, 18 No, 212.
NOTICE OF MEETING OF
EQUALIZATION BOARD OF
SUN NYSIDE IRRIGATION
DISTRICT OF KLAMATH
COUNTY, OREGON.
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Directors of tho Sunny
side Irrigation . District will,
commencing Tuesday, May 4th,
1943 at the office of the District
being the residence of John
Moore, sit as a Board of Equal
ization for the purpose of re
viewing and correcting the as
sessment roll of the District for
the fiscal year commencing July
1, 1943.
WENDELL MOORE,
Secretary. ,
A. 9, 16 No. 213.
NOTICE OF- M E E T I N G OF
EQUALIZATION BOARD OF
'PINE GROVE IRRIGATION
DISTRICT OF KLAMATH
COUNTY, OREGON.
Notice is hercbv eiven thnt th
Board of Directors of the Pine
Grove Irrigation District will,
commencing Tuesday, the 4th
day of May, 1043 artho office
of the Board of Directors at the
residence of L. O. Mills within
said District, sit as a Board of
Equalization for the purpose of
reviewing and correcting tho
assessment roll of the District for
the fiscal year commencing July
1, 1943.
A. R. CAMPBELL,
Secretary. lf
A. 0, 10 No. 214.
By VICTOR EUBANK
NEW YORK. April 0 UY)
Speculative liquidation shook
financial markets today In the
wako of the president's latest
strong anti-Inflation policy.
Stocks dropped I to 3 points
at a fast opening. Turnover of
79,000 shares for tho first hour
was tho largest for this pnriod
since November 8, 1840. Unclm'-the-market
bids helped tvdy
quotations by mid day but deal
ings slackened appreciably on
the come-back. There was an
other dip subsequently and, op.
proaching the close, many lend
ers were at or neur tliu day's
lows. The break, on an overage,
was one of thu sharpest In about
18 months. Transfers approxi
mated 2,700,000 shares.
Tho wage-price drive gener
ally put good war news In the
background as a market influ
ence.
Prominent on the slldo were
U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Santa
Fo, Union Pacific. Snllthcrn Pn.
ciflc, American Telephone, Gen
eral motors, Chrysler, Good
year, U. S. Rubber, Anaconda,
Standard Oil (NJ). Sf.nr
buck, J. I. Case. Boeing, United
Aircraft, Westinghouse, Union
curoiae, uu font, rhillp Mor
ris. Homestakn. Dnm,i Mi...
Loew's and Hiram Walker
btandard Gas 7 per cent pre
ferred was an exception, rising
better than a point.
Secondary bonds weakened In
tho morning but eventually re
gained a portion of their equi
librium. Closing quotations:
American Can 781
Am Car & Fdy 3;u
Am To! & Tel 14U
Anaconda 2BJ
Calif Packing 27 i
Cat Tractor 46
Comm'nw'lth St Sou t
General Electric 354
General Motors 47J
Gt Nor Ry pd 27J
Illinois Central 128
Int HaVvcster eii
Kennccott 32!
Lockheed 2H
Long-Boll "A" 81
Montgomery Ward 3,'i
Nash-Kelv 85
N Y Central Ml
Northern Pacific 141
Pac Gas & El 28 i
Packord Motor 41
Penna R R 21
Republic Steel in?
Richfield Oil OS
Safewav Stores 38J
Sears Roebuck . ... B"J
Southern Pacific 22 J
Standard Brands . (it
Sunshine Mining 6t
Trans-America .. 7 J
Union Oil Calif 181
Union Pacific on
U S Steel 5U
Warner Pictures Ill
A major floated down from a
plane and landed within a block
of his home In Scottsbluff, Neb.
Just dropped in on his wife.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO,
April 0 (AI'-USDA) CATTLE:
25; nominal; for week, medium
to good gtcitrs, hnlfers, and rmwo
cows scarce, nearby sha-stock 78
cents to $1.00 lower; common
cows $10.00-50; calves none. For
week good to choice vealcrs
$18.50.
HOGS: 150, strong; two cars
good to choice 2 49 lb. Idaho bar
rows and gilts $17.00; sorted 1110
dium $18.00; odd good sows
$15.05.
SHEEP: None; nominal; spring
lamb quoted $15.00-111.00; for
week, wonlod lnnilx 25 cents
lower; owes 50 ccnls lower.
PORTLAND, Ore., April 0
(AP-USDA) CAVl'LE: BolBblo
and totul 105; calves, salable
none, total 105; murket nominal;
week's bulk medium to good fed
steers $15.00-18.00, top $10.25;
medium lo good fed hollers
$13.30-15.30; medium to good
beef cows $11.50-13.29; Conner
nnd cutters $7.00-0,29; modhim
to good bulls $11. 50-13. 50; me
dium to good vealer.i $13.00 to
$10.00.
HOGS: Salable 205. totul 113;
market nominal; bulk Kood to
choice 180-230 lbs. Tliursdnv
$13.50-73.
SHEEP: Salnblo and total
none; market nominal; good to
choice fed lambs quotublo to
$15.50 or above; good shorn
ewes with No. 2 pelts salable to
$7.50.
SERIES
TO
PA! PREMIUM
POTATOES
CHICAGO, April 9 (AP-USDA)
Salable, boss 7000; total 13.000;
general trado slow, mostly 10-20c
lower than Thursday's averages;
top $15.80; bulk good and choice
180-380 lbs. S15. 50-75: most uond
and choice 150 180 lb. lights and
uuderwelKhts S14. 75-13. UO: niMd
300-550 lb. sows $15.25-0.
Salable caltlo 1000; snlnble
calves 400; all killing classes
steady; no cholco steers here;
bulk $14.73-18.00; about 200 head
UU3 lb. medium to good grade
short feds $15.00; top $18.00;
heifers very scarce; steady at
SUf.OO-lS.OO: Bond offering
$15.50; cows u little moro active;
out unevenly lower for week;
strictly uood beef cows in S14 SO-
bulk common and medium grade,
5i J.uo-l.l.00; ennners and cutters
$.ao-10.00; according to weight
and condition; bulls barely
steady 11 1 $14.80 down; venlcru
firm; odd choice hcod to $16.00;
niottly $14.00-15.00 on cnnrl In
cholco kinds; liberal movement
510CK cutllo this week ot $13.05
18.25 mostly.
Soluble sheep 3D00; total 3500;
Into Thursday, fat lambs active;
mostly steady; dinned lnm!
stronger; good to cholcii 80-115
10. woolen lambs $10.13-35; scv
erul loads cholco lambs
pcrs and small killers $10.40-50;
ip iu.ou; good to choice 80-108
lb. fed slipped lambs with No.
2 skins $13.10-40; top $13.50
on 102 lb. weights carrying No.
1 and 2 skins: sheen ste.idv
short deck strictlv uond 141 lh
ewes $0.40; package 135 lb.
weiKius $0.50, the top; today's
trade, fut lambs active: stenriv in
10c higher than Thursday; good
to cno.ee lea western wooled
lambs 112 lbs. down Slfl 2."S.5n-
tcp $10.50 on two loads choice
ouerings; good to cholco fed
western clinned lambs mntlv
with No. 2 skins $15.10-40; sheep
steady; scattered lots mostly
strictly good to choice ewes
mostly $0.00-50.
WASHINGTON, April 0 W)
Until May 1, the army, navy,
murines and lend-laano admini
stration may pay a premium of
ten cents per hundred weight
for tablo potutoes, provided the
.ipuds are dilppad prior to May 1.
The OPA wild It nuthorlnod
the premium to enuhln the ser
vices nod lend-lease "lo obtain
much needed supplies."
The OPA iiIko moved lo tluhlen
Its controls to provent what It
tormad the Illegal diversion ol
selected sued potatoes to food. Q
Seed potatoes may be sold at a
premium of 73 cents N hundred
wcluht over tuble potatoes only
upon nhowlng that thoy will bo
used for planting. Farmers sell
Inn seed potutoes to other farm- ,
ors In the sumo counties for
planting may continue to charge
the 73 cent premium, but a farm
er or county shipper must have
a written certificate from a stale
or county war board to churn
the premium on sales to dealers.
PORTLAND, Oro., April 0 (K)
Orders for Idaho white, suitor Q
and Pondero.ia pine Increusnd 1.
258.000 board feet for the week
ending April 3 over the previous
week at 03 Identical mills, tho
Western Pine association report
ed toduy.
Orders for theso and associat
ed species for the week totaled
72,801,000 board feet, compared
with 71,603.000 for the previous
week, and 00,774,000 feel for the
corresponding week last year.
Similar comparisons of ship,
ments oro 84,401,000 feot, B7
110,000 nnd 70,483,000 feet; pro
duction: 50,023,000 feet, 54,302,.
000 and 30,001,000 feet.
WHEAT
CHICAGO, April 0 (It'i Presi.
dent ltoosovelt's order directing
that celling bo set "on all com
modifies affecting the cost of liv
ing" unsettled grains today and
prices dropped moro than 2 cents
at one lime In heavy trading.
Grains subsequently rallied
from their lows In diminished ac
tivity, but wheat, outs, and rye
wcro unable to got back to yes
terday's finish. Most corn con
tracts held ot their ceilings and
September, after breaking a cant
ut tho opening, recovered a ma
jor part of the lost ground.
At tho closo wheat was off 1.
Uc, May $1.421.,, July $1,411-1.
corn was unchanged to 1c lower,
May $1.01, September $1,041-1,
oats were Me lower nnd rye
showed losses of 1I-H cents.
If you warn to soli it phone
The Herald and Nows "want
ads," ?124
NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON,
FOR KLAMATH COUNTY.
IN THE MATTER OF THE ES
TATE OF SARAH ADELINE
WALKER, also known as Ad
dle Walker, deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
the undersigned administrators
of tho above entitled cstute have
filed thoir final account of the
administration of said estate and
lhat the Court has appointed
April 24, 1943, at ten o'clock
a. m. as the time for hearing
objections to such final account
and tha settlement thereof.
Luke E. Walker,
Earl E. Walker,
Administrators of said
Estute.
Mar.. 20. Apr, 2, 8, 16. No. 204
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
I i''r?
"I was just tellin' my brother Fred this
morning, Judge...thcre's never been a time
in our lives when we got to live up to that
old eayin' ' United we stand, divided we fall'
more than wc have to today."
"How true that is, Herb. And for tho
life of mc, I can't figure out why, at a time
like this, some folks insist on raising a ques
tion like prohibition. I can't imagine any
thing that would tickle our enemies moro
than to get us folks over here taking sides
against each other, arguing about an tain
like that. We've got a hc-mnn's job on our
hands to win this war and, wo can't be.
wasting our mindu, our money nnd our
strength fighting about something wo
tried for nearly 14 years and found couldn't
.work,
"I say there's n time and a place for
everything, and this is no time or plnco to
be doing any fightin' except tho kind that's
going to win tho war."
Omlmnti ij Altohllt Hmwii Indulitu, M.