PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
Juna 2D, 194S
WALLACE RAPS
RFC HEAD FOR
BLOCKING BEW
(Conlinued From Page One)
10 per cent of our purchases and
commitments for these materials
have been initiated by BEW.
RFC commitments for foreign
purchases have been approxi
mately 53,50U,UUU,UUU 01 wnicn
not more than 10 per cent was
originated by BEW. We have
actually received and paid for
materials to the value of $1,600,
000,000 of which less than 9 per
cent can be credited to BEW in
itiative. Obstruction
"2. That RFC and I have ob
structed and delayed programs
of development and procurement
initiated by BEW. There has
been no serious delay by us of
any vital program.
"I will answer the statement
in detail and be glad to have a
committee of congress fully in
vestigate the facts."
Wallace said Jones had created
a "false impression" in testimony
before the congressional econ
omy committee headed by Sen
ator Byrd (D-Va.).
Prevent Harm .
"It Is time to prevent further
harmful misrepresentations of
this nature," Wallace said, add
ing: "Although the president, on
April 13, 1942, transferred full
control over the programming
of imported strategic materials
from the reconstruction finance
corporation to the board of eco
nomic welfare, which operates
under broad directives received
from the war production board
(WBP), Mr. Jones has never ac
cepted that authority.
Obstacle
"He and his personnel down
the line have thrown a great
many obstacles in the way of
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
FOB THE BETTER grades of
fuel oils, accurate, metered de
liveries, try Fred H. Heilbro li
ner, 821 Spring street, tele
phone 4153. Distributor Shell
. Heating Oils. , 7-13m
COMPLETE service men's gift
, section at Rudy a Men s Shop,
' 6th and Main. 7-25
FOR SALE Cow, just fresh.
with heifer calf. 9102 So. 6th.,
near Idella s store. 6-29
FOR SALE Small Pinto saddle
horse. Phone 6797. 7-1
5-ROOM white -i stucco house,
harwood floors throuout, Ve
netian blinds, automatic heat.
. electric water heater, fenced
and 'Victory garden. Call 9977
after 9 - o'clock for appoint-
- menu 7-1
TWO FURNISHED 3-room apart
. ments, across river. Gas stoves.
Fine view. $35 and $40.
Drews' Manstore. 7-1
WOMEN for laundrv mrlr V.t.
perienced or unexperienced.
uascaae xaunary. 7-3
; USED LUMBER CHEAP
Sash 50c and up.
Doors $1.75 and up.
Lath i cent each
Inquire at building being wreck
ed across from Pelican Bay Mill
Office, Pelican City
7-1
NICELY FURNISHED, clean
4-room. house. Close in. Trees
and lawn. For couple. $25.
105 Grant. . . 7-1
VERY CLOSE IN 3-room fur
. nished duplex. Large electric
refrigerator, washing machine.
Phone 3086. 6-29
1933 CHEV. TRUCK Good con
dition, good tires. J. E. Whit
latch, Malin. Phone 165. 6-30
Of course ... we exult that our U. S.
soldier of today is the healthiest the world
has ever seen. But let us remember that
he depends upon healthy workers ot the
home front to maintain him ot his great
job.
Every "hour off for illness" we take lets
him down! From our good health he
forges a vital war weapon. We must not
neglect that health!
CUMIN'S
"The Friendly
u and Mala
L
our exercise of the powers given
us to carry out wartime assign'
ments. Some of these obstruc
tionist tactics have been minor
and annoying and some have
been of major consequence in
this lob of waging total war."
In his statement, Wallace dis
cussed the stockpiling of various
strategic materials. He said con
gress had made funds available
for such a purpose as far back
as 1939 and that in the summer
of 1940 the RFC was given funds
for stockpiling.
RFC Failed
"From the summer of 1940 un
til well past December 7, 1941,
Wallace said, "the reconstruction
finance corporation failed dis
mally, so far as the import field
was concerned, to build tne
stockpiles authorized and direct
ed by the congress nearly eigh
teen months before Pearl Har
bor.
"During this period, of course
private purchasing of imports
continued on a somewnai in
creased scale due to better bus
iness, and the reconstruction
finance corporation entered into
various underwriting agreements
with some countries under which
we agreed to take surpluses if
they were not bought privately.
Not Aggressive
"This seems to us to have
been a timid, business-as-usual
procedure; at least it was a 'far
cry' from the aggressive gov
ernment stockpiling which the
congress directed and authorized
so that this nation might have
a margin of security in its im
ported raw materials inventor
ies." Wallace referred to testimony
of last December before the sen
ate banking committee In which
he and Milo Perkins, executive
director of BEW, "gave evidence
of the extent to which he (Jones)
had delayed the foreign rubber
nrocram and cited specifically
his stalling in the gathering of
wild rubber in South America
and the planting of rubber
plantations in Africa and in the
planting of cryptostegia tor na
tural rubber in the Caribbean."
He said he was making today's
additional statement because
'the effort to misrepresent the
facts concerning the board of
economic warfare has con
tinued."
Public Duty '
"There are times when the
sense of public duty outweighs
the natural personal reluctance
to discuss facts of this nature,
Wallace said. "This is such a
time."
Wallace listed quinine, used
in the treatment of malaria.
among the strategic materials re
quired. He said that on April
14, 1942, General Douglas Mac-
Arthur wired that two million
seeds (Far East Cinchona bark)
of a high grade strain had been
brought out of the Philippines
and quoted MacArthur as say
ing the seeds "must be planted
without delay.
Accuses Jones
'1 am sorry to have to in
form this committee," the vice
president said in his statement,
that Jesse Jones and Will Clay
ton (assistant secretary of com
merce and director of the de
fense supplies corporation, an
RFC subsidiary) stalled for
months on this program.
... There are times when
what we need Is more fights
and fewer shortages.
FEW OBJECT TO
Final hearing on the county
budget was held Tuesday in the
county courtrooms.
By two o'clock in the after
noon today, only two persons
had come In with objections to
the budget. These were for
higher salaries. After the hear
ing, the final levy is made and
the budget signed by each mem
ber of the county court. The new
budget goes into effect July 1.
Parachutes require about 150
yards of cloth.
But He Needs
YOUR Health
. . Tool
FOR DRUGS
Drug Store
Phone 4514
BRITISH AIM
EXPLOSIVES AT
FJ
(Continued From Page One)
snowecj of tnese 339 were
American and 1098 British.
Thundering over the scene of
the world's first 1000-bomber
raid for the 117th time, the
RAF left fires leaping up to
wards me overhanging clouds.
Cathedral Hit
The German high command
in . us regular communioue
broadcast by the Berlin radio
and recorded by the Associated
Press, asserted that "the Co
logne cathedral suffered heavy
damage from1 explosive and in
cendiary bombs and that Co
logne's population "suffered
losses.
The German high command
called the Cologne attack "an
other serious terror raid against
residential quarters.
A Berlin broadcast of a DNB
dispatch recorded by the Asso
ciated Press asserted the dome
of the famous Cologne cathed
ral was hit and a part of the
Gothic structure, begun in 1248
and completed in 1880, was
was damaged by explosions and
lire.
Second in Month
It was the second raid of the
month against the great Rhine-
1 a n d industrial center which
the nazis have been reported
working avidly to restore. The
1000-bomber raid was reported
to have driven out 200,000 of
the city's 800.000 population
and wrecked 250 factories.
The German communioue re
ported property damage in both
Cologne and Hamburg and said
26 of the attacking bombers
were shot down. Thickly popu
lated parts of Cologne were
said to have been destroyed as
result of a great number of
explosive and incendiary
bombs.
The official bulletin gave no
results of the attack on Ham
burg, last hit March 3 and an
air target nearly 100 times since
the war began.
in secondary night sweeps,
fighter command aircraft at-
tacked enemy shipping in the
channel, damaging one small
supply vessel and two escort
craft, the communique said. At
the same time intruder patrols
attacked railway targets in
France.
Last night's raid was the
eighth British assault on Ger
man targets in 10 days.-.
Follow Franc Blow
The twin foray by the British
bombers followed up a two-way
attack yesterday by strong for
mations of American Flying
Fortresses on two enemy tar
gets in occupied France the
submarine yards at St. Nazaire
and an enemy fighter airdrome
at Beaumont-Le-Roger, 30 miles
southwest of Rouen.
Such allied air blows on the
French homeland, the nazi-con-
trolled Vichy radio declared to
day in a broadcast recorded by
the Associated Press, have made
more than 16,000 persons home
less. The report also said that
fatal casualties averaged 15
daily from June 25, 1940 to
June 21, 1943.
Kentucky Miners
Straggle Back
To Coal Pits
(Continued From Page One)
miners were working, and about
4000 were in the pits in Ala
bama. About 3500 more men left
their jobs in the anthracite fields
of eastern Pennsylvania but this
was largely offset by a back-to-
work move which appeared to be
gaining momentum in other sec
tions of the same area.
The return of miners In west
ern Pennsylvania s soft coal
fields reduced the number of
idle there to around 45,000 out
of 117,000 employed.
It's fine to be a person with a
heart of gold if it doesn't stop
you from having some of the
stuff in your pocket.
HURRVI LEAVE SOON.
-.Doors Opto 1110 f4!
1 Tta n .
teHEPBURN
KEEPER
AFLAME
Day" Jl
ITARI I!
"Forever and a Day"
Wlin 71 SIO STARS
IR
ICTORES
Ifih
Kiwanians Sure
To Best Bond
Sale Quota
(Continued From Page One)
will go toward the Chiloquin
Fort Klamath district.
In the list of communities,
from which four names will be
secured for "the fighter planes,
leaders were Merrill, Keno,
Malin and Henley, with Sprague
River in fifth place; Gilchrist,
sixth; Chiloquin-Fort Klamath,
seventh; Bly-Beatty, eighth'; Bo
nanza, ninth. Surprises may be
in store following tonight's pur
chases. Commandos will assist
during the program.
The box score on the commun
ity standings is printed on Page
1.
STRIKE BILL
WASHINGTON, June 29 m
The tripartite war labor board
was agreed today on at least two
points of potential controversy
in the new Connally-Smith-Hark-ness
strike control bill:
1 The 8ct will not alter the
present participating roles of la
bor members.
2 It will not Interfere with
the present policy of ordering
maintenance of membership
clauses written into labor con
tracts. The board, composed equally
of public, industry, and labor
representatives, devoted half of
yesterday to a study of the act,
passed over presidential veto, in
consultation with Lloyd Garri
son, general counsel. An opin
ion on these will be sought from
the attorney general, too.
The board's interpretation.
backed by the attorney general,
would not necessarily preclude
a court challenge on these points,
but official sources believe the
united front would carry some
weight in court, particularly in
view of the three-unit nature of
the WLB.
U. S. AERIAL BLOWS
(Continued From Page One)
cargo ship or a squadron of tor
pedo boats.
22 Raids
Sunday's raids on Kiska raised
to 22 the number of separate
air actions carried out over that
enemy North Pacific outpost in
a four-day period.
while there was no explan
ation for the decline in activity
on Monday, it was assumed here
that the weather had closed in
again. The attacks against Kis
ka are regarded as pre-invasion,
softening-up raids, preparing the
way for the amphibious expedi
tion that some day is expected
to smash the last Japanese hold
on the American island chain.
Germans Losing
Air Battle at
Gates of Leningrad
MOSCOW, June 29 W)
Violent aerial battles are swirl
ing over the approaches to Len
ingrad with the Germans losing
a big number of planes in the
past 25 days, battlefront dis
patches reported today.
German losses were so heavy
the nazis have changed their
tactics, increasing fighter escort
for bombers, and varying the
times of raids, it was said.
From the front farther nortn
on the Rybachl (Fisher) penin
sula other dispatches pictured
fighting complicated by weather
and the fact that darkness never
occurs.
Extra
COLOR CARTOON
Pits Smith'! "WHS Horm"
Latest War News
id RULES OUT
ALTERATIONS IN
m Bonn Opwi 1 tttl i:AlM
WExtraaill
I COLOR CARTOON I '
P Smith'! "WHS Horm"
1 Latest War News
FBI PRISONER
PLEADS GUILTY
E
(Continued From Page One)
cerning national defense with
the intention of having Lehmltz
forward it to Germany, Conroy
said.
De Spretter met with Lehmltz
on a number of occasions, Con
roy related, and gave to him his
observations on shipping in the
New York harbor. Lehmltz was
charged under the wartime es
pionage act with sending such
information, written in Invisible
ink between the lines of innocu
ous letters to persons in neutral
countries, for axis consumption.
Admits Charge
Conroy said that De Spretter
admitted he had obtained most
of his Information in manner
similar to that used by Lehmltz
watching the New York har
bor and activities on the Staten
Island waterfront. Both men
lived on the island.
De Spretter furnished Leh
mltz on one occasion with a copy
of a confidential book published
by an aircraft manufacturing
company which contained de
tailed specifications of its planes
as well as photographic draw
ings. Conroy said. For this, De
Spretter received $100 from Leh
mitz, he added.
Plans Formed to
Care for Working
Mothers' Children
(Continued From Page One)
and also supplement their in
comes by taking in children.
When the survey is complete,
confidential records will be
filed at the Klamath County
Welfare commission located In
the Memorial building, and
mothers wishing to place their
children, can go there for a list
of available homes.
However, the commission
does not encourage mothers to
go to work unless it is neces
sary. The service is primarily
for those who have to have a
job.
Nursery School
The Mills school nursery
which It had been hoped would
be open by July 1, has been
held up briefly by formalities,
but should be ready to take
youngsters after the Fourth.
Between 40 and 60 children
of pre-school age, that is, be
tween 2 and 6 years, can be
accommodated at the nursery.
with arrangements for enlarg
ing to 80 if necessary.
Id WPA Rooms
The project will be held In
the same rooms as those for
merly occupied by the WPA
nursery. The initial investment,
the purchasing of extra sup
plies, etc., will be made by the
Soroptimist club, which has
done much in the establishment
of the nursery. Personnel,
which will include a head
teacher with nursery school
training, two assistant teachers,
a cook and a janitor, will be
paid by funds from the Lanham
act and will be under supervi
sion of the board of education.
' The Soroptimist club will
handle the commercial angle of
the nursery project such as set
ting the price for each child
and keeping the books.
With the two projects for
child care working in conjunc
tion, most children whose moth
ers are working, 'should be
taken care of, with pre-school
children of from 2-6 years in
the nursery or private homes
and those older or younger or
who are handicapped in some
way and need special care, also
taken care of in private homes.
Always read the classified ads
Last Day-
GENE AUTRY
"Horn InVyomlrig"
ginger""rogers
"Tom, Dick I Horry"
A Double Play On
Your Funny-Bonal
Harry Langdon
"DOUBLE
TROUBLE"
with
charlis Roams
KATHSRINI LIWIS
Doort 0pm Itll liH
OFESPIONAG
j TOMORROW!
1
OCXWMMM
mmm
Japs Boast of
Preparation for
Australian Fight
(Continued From Page One)
according to Domel, all attacks
against the Australian contin
ent by Jnpanr.se air forces had
been carried out by naval units.
Use of army planes, they said,
indicated they had taken off
from secret land bases In the
Southwest Pacific which have
been established during the
past three months.
OWE HALL LAW
EUEDATCOUNCIL
(Continued From Page One)
not be permitted at a public
dance or on the premises unless
accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian. This brought up the
question of how one would be
able to determine the age of the
youngsters, as - some children
look old for their age and others.
who are older, look youncer
than they actually are. Aim
brought up was, would this regit
latlon bar youngsters under 16
from attending high school
dances and affairs such as D Mo
lay puts on during the year. City
Attorney J. H. Carnal. an said
that he did not think that dances
of this nature were public
dances, inasmuch as they were
more or less Invitational and
were not operated for profit.
Councilman A. H. Batsman
said that his conception of a pub
lic dance was any affair to which
admission was charged.
Licensing Hit
Almost the same arguments
arose over the licensing of pub
lic dance halls. The ordinance
states that any lessee or opera
tor of a dance hall or dance must
pay a $50 a year license fee and
exhibit the license somewhere in
the hall. This brought up the
question as to whether school
dances would have to be licensed
or if fraternal organizations
would have to pay the fee. Car
nahan again said that these were
not considered public dances in
his opinion.
The second new provision in
the much debated ordinance was
that anyone leaving a public
dance after 11 p. m. would have
to pay a full admission charge
to get back In. This, Police
Chief Earl Heuvel explained
was to prevent persons from
running In and out of the dance
hall to drink.
Intermissions Hit
A woman In the audience rep
resenting the Eagles auxiliary
wondered how this would affect
intermissions. She said that
their intermissions were at 11:30
o'clock and would they have to
charge the people who came
back after this was over? Mayor
Houston said that Intermissions
could be held a little earlier.
After considerable more dis
cussion on various other parts
of the ordinance, it was put aside
until next meeting. Mayor Hous
ton said that anyone who had
any more questions or griev
ances should appear next Tues
day (Monday, the usual meeting
night, is a holiday), when there
will be a second reading of the
measure.
Bids Opened
Bids for gas and oil to be used
by the city were opened with
low bid for gas going to Associat
ed and those for oil to Union and
Standard. These two companies
both submitted equal prices so
each will get a contract for six
months.
A request by the Retail Trade
bureau for permission to stencil
slogans on sidewalks, mostly on
Main street, to assist in selling
Now! 2 Thriller-Dillersl j
! 1 , r a mm mmmam tut IU4 m 4u jrii 'iT ' '
EDDIE BRACKEN . . . Star
! ; of "Happy Go Lucky" and 'V 1
I ; "Star Spangled Rhythm" . . . Ml
1 ttampi our crime on the I J C
"This Is America" 0
Latest News Events titiGGSfi
RICHARD STONE
SAID SUICIDE
Richard Henry Stone, 38, for
a number of years a resident of
Klamath Falls, died of self In
flicted wounds at his home In
Portland late Monday night, ac
cording to word received here.
Stone was employed In 1026 for
Stone's grocery, and in 1030
worked as clerk for Murphey's
seed store.
The Stone family lived in
Chelsea addition. The young
man was also employed for a
time by Pelican Buy Lumber
company, Dunn and Baker, and
other concerns. In addition to
his wife, Alice, and two sons,
Bob and Delbert, Stone Is said
to have a brother, Albert, liv
ing In this city.
F
I
(Continued From Page One)
said 175 persons were killed
and 300 injured.)
Carding Airflalds
Meanwhile American medium
bombers and fighters concen
trated on airfields in Sardinia,
setting buildings ablaze and
pounding dispersal areas, and )
RAF Wellingtons raided San
Giovanni near the toe of the :
Italian mainland. 1
Photographs of the Leghorn j
raid showed "one hit and two
damaging misses on the cruiser, (
and picture Interpreters also re-,
ported many hits on the oil
tanks," the official report said.
"Also hit by numerous bombs
were the railroad lines leading
to the marshalling yards and
tracks east of the city, a bridge,
sheds, a storage depot or two."
Hits were also scored near an
iron foundry and torpedo fac-1
tory. I
Enemy Opposition j
Nearly 100 Fortresses raided !
Leghorn, 180 miles north of 1
Rome, on May 28 in their long
est combat flight from North
African bases up to that time.
Medium bombers ranging over
Sardinia encountered heavy
enemy opposition both from the
ground and In the air.
(New attacks upon Reggio
Calabria and Messina also were
reported by the Italian high
command.)
SENATE GIVES OKAY
WASHINGTON. June 29 (P)
The senate passed and returned
to the house today the 171,300..
000,000 war department approp
riations bill after charges of
"waste and extravagance" were
heard and Senator Byrd (D-Va.)
announced his Joint economy
committee would investigate
army and navy expenditures.
war bonds for the July drive
was granted by the council.
The owner of a wildlife ex
hibit was granted permission to
locate at 627 Main street for an
indefinite period.
Winnie Hoak was awarded the
bid for meals for city Jail pris
oners and guards.
Councilman A. H. Bussman
asked for permission to put up
liens at Main and Ninth trt
Klamath and Ninth streets. Sec
ond and Klamath streets and Sec
ond and Main streets advising
trucks which may to go In an ef
fort to keep them off Main street.
This was okayed by the council.
IN PORTLAND
EDITORIALS ON v
NEWS . vi
(Continued From Page One)
hit submarine docks and itr
fields In France. Six of then
fall to return,
JUOTK our persistence In the
1 face of losses that are ad.
mlttedly heavy. This la Import
ant because It Indicates we have,
the necessary reserves to KEEP
UP the air battle.
If we didn't have the reserves,
we COULDN'T keep it up,
TN the Mediterranean, 100 of
our Fortresses bomb the port
of Leghorn, III northern Italy,
Leghorn is believed to be a burs
fur Ilia mysterious and elusive
Italian fleet.
All the Fortresses come back
safety, their crews reporting
relatively little oposltlon.
They flew 1100 mile to make
the attack.
THE steady, day-by-day bomb-
IIIH V, kMHV, .JO ,,,,,,, aim
the toe and Instep ot the Italian .
boot goes on relentlessly. J
VIAJOR FERDINAND BISH
1 1 OP, of the marines, back In
Sen I til- on leave, says the Jnp.
captured by the AMERICANS
in the South hcas are the lucky
ours those taken by tho heart
hunting natives of the Solomons
don't fnre so well.
(In nlir treatment nf Jnn ran.
.... - - - .
lives, he reports, we continue to '
adhere strictly to the provisions
of the Geneva convention.)
HERE aren l TOO MANY Jap
prloi)crs, ho says, as under
their Samurai cixlo they are re
quired to choose death in prefer
ence to capture. (Our men havt
been generally reported as co
operating wllh than accom
modatingly on tills point.)
Once a Jup IS captured. Major
Bishop says, he ceases lo look Q
upon himself as a superman and
becomes Just an ordinary human
being.
But, he adds, the Jap captivas
apiear to be culmly confident of
Jup victory,
QETTINO back to the homa
front, the coal miners are re
ported today to be straggling
back to work. About 149,000 of
them, the dispatches say, still
remain Idle out of more than a
half million.
The weight of public opinion
is begining to be felt.
"THE British have a new quip,
F, .4 f 1. t - I - k.
chuckling heartily over it.
It runs: '
"The trouble with Hitler'a m
fortress is that it LACKS A 3
ROOF."
VITAL STATISTICS
ALLEN Born at Klamath
Valley hospital, Klamath Falls,
Ore., on June 29, 1943, to Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Allen, 1026 ,
Jefferson street, a girl. Weight'
8 pounds 9'4 ounces.
For Insurance to comply with
the new Automobile Financial
Responsibility law sea Hans Nor
land. 118 N. 7th.
NEW TODAYI
CONTINUOUS MUN
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ACTION
and
ROMANCE
THAT BLAZES
LIKE MOLTEN
STEEL!
1
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.. ililUll.l
1 1 SICHARD TRAVIS '
Y. 'MIINI CMIO
IkMf jg. IVIITN SDINT ;
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