eIgetour
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH. FALLS, OREGON
July 22. 1048
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StOfU and AofU
FRANK JENKINS
MALCOLM EFLEY
Managing Editor
BOEING PLAN
10 TAKE IRK
T
to.
rf avel Roundup
y. J :''"Bj''ka'JLCOLM EPLEY
"THIS final Installment of a rather lengthy
I travelogue starts with a wholehearted salute
to I our railroads. 'We have had opportunity, in
on .
Lv 1 observe rather closely the
IIS Vl enormous Job the railroads are
1 f 4. , ..11.. I. namlnrt
w it ., ft noma Buccesuuiur ui j jw k iiAna
I .. " -
i lp3 unpredented
IP 'J Peners and
V 'iaVar
The story
roads are doing in transport
ing troops and war materials,
thus playing a tremendously
Important part in the war ef
fort, has been quite widely
told. At the same time, the
EPLEY
iwirf. . ira ran-vlno- a terrific volume of
passenger traffic, creating a situation in the
Jaeger centers that has to be seen to be
believed. " f ','
JThe congestion In the big depots In Wash
ington, New York and Chicago, and no doubt
other large centers which we did not happen
to visit, Is almost beyond imagination. But
nowhere in our travels did we see greater
press of iiimanlty in a railroad station than in
thjrTfamillar Union station in Portland. This
inly be due in part to the fact this station is
mich smaller than the depots in the big east
ern and mid western cities, and still is handling
ft Comparable volume) of main line passengers.
Ttya eastern stations, along with the main
liters, also are jammed with the travelers on
thW local trains which run into those stations
frpm surrounding . suburban communities. If
Portland, also had that to contend with, the
Union station there 'would simply have to be
abandoned.
it down in any of these big stations and
wfrtch the -faces of people- going by. and you
ar impressed with the fact that a large per
centage of them register something akin to
desperation. There are long line-ups at the
ticket windows,, and crowds create a jam in
frint of the track gates long before leaving
time of the bigger trains. Once the gate are
opened, there is a great rush for seats. .
ijWho are all of these travelers? Well, there
ui lots of service men moving about, either
wider orders or on furlough or leave. The
general practice of civilian travelers Is to give,
thpse boys the breaks; most civilians realize,
wa believe, that they are lucky to be per
mitted to travel at all. Then there are large
numbers of service wives, traveling to distant
point.' to-5-be with their men, and many of
ihjese are accompanied by one or more small
arhjildren. There is a considerable volume of
regular business' travel. Finally, there ' seem
to be 'a good many people who have a little
znbnejj in 'their pocket for the first time In
rnanyj years' aiid are using it to make long-talked-about
.visits, "back home" or with rela-
Tthe War Today
;f. i Br DeWTTT MacKEHZIE
it certainly gives one a grateful feeling of
1 1 security to hear Vice-Admiral Frederick
Home, (vice-chief of naval operations, say the
navy Is-planning for a Pacific war "that will
last at least until 1949," but it's equally good
to note that he doesn't specificully state he be
lieves the conflict necessarily will run that
long. ;
Six more years might not mean much to a
tortoise which has an expectancy of 200 years
ot life. But It's an awfully long time to the
average citizen who is looking forward to the
day when he can take his car out of storage
and drive into the countryside for a steak
mothered with onions. -
(When . James F. Byrnes, director of war
mobilization, was asked about the admiral's
statement he replied: "If anyone else is planning
on that t basis, I do not know that they are."
T.i V.- Soong, China's astute foreign minister
who is now in Washington, remarked that it's
"anybody's guess" how long the fight with
Japan , will last and that seems to be a fair
assay of the situation.
Loncj and Painful
ONE thing we're sure of is that whatever the
duration of the war, it will be plenty long
and painful. ; Its length and bloodshed and pri
vations ,will depend mainly on civilian efforts
in 'producing sinews of victory. We must neither
allow ourselves to grow slack because of over-.
confidence,, nor become despondent and there
fore inefficient for fear of a long war.
Unfortunately the amount of striking power
the allies could turn against Japan has been
largely dependent on the demands of the Eur
Withholding Tax Helps Save
to Buy
( By OLIVE CORNETT
' Bond Sale Chairman
The wage-earning public is
quickly learning that the 20 per
cent withholding tax that be
came effective on July 1 Is an
advantage rather than a burden.
Wage , -earners in offices, bus
iness and' industry are beginning
to Realize that it is equivalent
to ' opening a savings account
with Uncle Sam and putting
way ne money with which to
meet '-their payment in March
184on their 1943 income tax.
They... are Jeaming, too, that
Uncle Sam will refund the
laoney V-they have paid in more
unprecedented
The
knAfllrlni a Km it in
there was no
Everywhere,
evidence of
job being done
of what the rail
viously loaded
through at
- JUU aW UWira VI M.V Uti VllO V Ilia atia
volume of both o our Journey came at a station in Canada
freight. when a through freight, its gondola cars ob-
embarkation point.
a
Great Institution
trip taken in
A month
stroyers were
The field of
have blasted
island, up to
on the tip of
Defense Bonds
than the amount due for their
tax or if their 1943 earnings are
not sufficient to require pay
ment of any tax.
Young people who are help
ing out in many places during
vacation time, earning more
than young -people have ever
before earned, will probably not
work long enough to earn the
amount required for an income
tax return. But they know new
that Uncle Sam expects them to
make a return and file a claim
for the amounts now being with
held under this hew law. and
that all of this money Is actually
tlves somewhere. It all counts up to an
travel volume.
cross-country travel is heavier, we be
lieve, in the south and middle of the country
than in the north. The stations in Spokane
were amazingly quiet and placid. Three meals
day were available in the diner of the North
Coast Limited, the cuisine was excellent, and
serious delay in service.
along the railroad lines, there is
the tremendous wartime freight
, .. ". w. .1-
on the rails. One of the thrills
with war materials, roared
high speed toward some distant
"T"HE efficiency of interline travel arrange-
I merits impressed us more than ever on a
a time, such as this.
ago Remy Stein of the local SP
office sold us a ticket about two feet long,
handed us reservations all through the east, and
made out a schedule that was complicated by
the whim that took us to a sideline town in
Nebraska and another in Canada. It all worked
perfectly.
Nor should we overlook, in this little tribute,
the men who run and fire the engines, operate
the switches, check our tickets on the trains,
and handle all the meticulous details that go
into railroading.
The railroads are a great institution.
a a a a
Small world item: Coming west on the North
Coast Limited, we encountered Mrs. Isabel
Brtxner, county school supervisor, in the diner.
She was homeward bound from a BPW meet
ing in the east
Coming west, also, were a number of east
erners who had never been west before, and
their remarks and questions about the western
country were a matter of great amusement.
One New Yorker was on his way to take a
government job at Pasco, and his frank ignor
ance about , the west kept us constantly answer
ing questions.
Up in Montana, some one In the car shouted:
"A deer!"
' There on the hill beside the tracks was a
beautiful big buck. He strolled with regal
nonchalance up the slope, looking back at the
speeding train, while passengers "ooed and
ahed" about him.
A few minutes later our New York friend
leaned over to us:
"That deer back there," he said, "Was it
wild?" .
"Sure, It was wild."
"Who owns him? was the next question, and
we explained patiently that no ope owns the
deer; in fact, he owns that sweep of beautiful
country in the Montana Rockies we could see
from the train windows.
.Our friend shook his head, and sat back for
a long time, no doubt in quiet speculation over
the wonders of the west.
opean conflict. However, things are looking
decidedly brighter in the Pacific as our in
dustrial efforts begin to pyramid. It's en
couraging though surely nothing to cause com
placenceto see the United Nations go on the
offensive against the Mikado's forces at the
same time as the allies launch their "begin
ning of the end" drives in Europe.
a a a a
Progress
AS witness to our progress we have yester
day's great allied air raid on Bairoko har
bor. New Georgia, when ISO bombers dumped
133 tons of grief on the Japs. This was a com
panion piece to last Saturday's huge aerial
attack by 192 of our warplanes on Kahlll.
Japan's key base in the Solomons, when n(ne
enemy ships, including a cruiser and three de
sunk.
allied aggressiveness covers the
whole vast Pacific area. Our warshins acain
the Nipponese defenses on KIska
tlje Aleutians, in preparation for
invasion. The time must be near for the
amphibious assault which will return KIska to
American bands. That will lessen the Jap
threat to Alaska and give us another Important
air-base within reach of enemy territory.
Almost coincident with the KIska assault,
American bombers made the first raid on
Japan s northernmost island base Paramushiro,
the Kurile chain. We apparent
ly were operating trom Amchltka, in the west
ern Aleutians, demenstratlng the fact that we
can reach out to Jap territory from our own
bases.
At the same time American Liberators from
Australia blasted Celebes. These two raids,
each of which represented a round trip of about
2000 miles, are among the longest bombing
flights on record. That's something for the
Japs to worry about.
being saved and will be returned
to them.
With their confidence restor
ed, they are generously buying
bonds with their big wages be
cause they well realize that this
is an investment they may never
again have the opportunity to
make.
FIGHTERS' FORTUNES
HOUSTON,. Tex., (Work
ers at the Houston Shipbuild
ing Corporation yard are spend
ing their spare minutes collect
ing wampum any trinkets
which might catch the eye of a
South Pacific native.
The trinkets will bo to fieht-
ing men in that area, where
United States cash has no ap
peal. Classified Ads Bring Results.
eeaa. tut r at awwci. mcr.u. m. tt a. nT. off. 7-It
"We're having a big picnic for you tomo..v Uio neigh- i
jbors thought after belno cooped ud in a submarine so
JOa long you'd be dying
Repeated Injury in Same
Spot May Cause Disability
Dr. Masters' Health Column
By SR. THOMAS D. MASTERS
Continued and repeated In
jury to any one place on the
body often causes serious and
painful effects, and may even
lead to permanent disability.
Scattered about the body at
points where friction occurs,
there are small, thin-walled sacs
with a special lining capable of
secreting a watery fluid. These
structures serve the purpose of
minimizing the friction between
surfaces that slide on each other,
and render movement easier.
while reducing wear on the op
posing structures.
These bursae (from the Latin
word meaning purse or sac) are
found between bones and the
overlying soft tissue. In the vi
cinity of certain joints and where
muscles or tendons slide over
one another.
SUBJECT TO INJURY
Bursae are subject to Inlury
by direct blows and also by fre
quent minor irritations that come
from continued overuse. Certain
occupations tend to repeated in
juries of certain bursae.
. Housemaids who have scrub
bed floors while on their knees
have so often injured the bursae
lying in front of the knee-cap,
that the condition is generally
called "housemaid s knee." Min
er strike the tip of the elbow
against the stone walls of the
mine, injuring the bursa lying
just beneath the skin at this
polpt and this Injury Is called
"miner's elbow."
Tennis players or machine op
erators develop so-called "tennis
elbow" by extending the wrist
forcefully, while the hand is re
lated inward. This act may harm
the bursa lying just below the
elbow and over the joint be
tween the two bones of the arm.
Occasionally, bursae develop
in unusual places in response to
unusual needs. Such develop on
the insldes of the knees of Horse
back riders, and are known as
rider's bursae." The various
locations of these sacs, of course,
alter the symptoms that follow'
their Injury.
In the instance of a fall onthe
knee with injury to the bursa,
there may be an oversecretion
of fluid into the knee. This con
dition is noticeable as a saft,
fluctuant swelling over the knee
cap and it is associated with
pain and restriction of any move
ment of the knee that would
place a strain on the injured
bursa. The swelling and pain
usually subside in a week or
two. Any use that aggravates
the pain should be avoided, and
warm dressings applied. Abso
lute rest is not desirable, be
cause it leads to the formation
of adhesions across the sac and
the usefulness of the bursa is
lot.
CONDITION NOT SERIOUS
This condition is not serious,
and if the injury is not repeated,
there is rarely any further trou
ble. But frequent recurrence, of
the same type of irritation may
result in continual oversecretion
Get On the Roll of Honor
The women of Klamath county, led by the Soroptimlst
club and the Business and Professional Women, are respon
sible for the July War Bond sales,
NOWI I ..Every woman In Klamath county Is urged to
buy or sell to her neighbor $200 or more In E bonds before
July 31. ' .
Blank applications are available at all banks and post
offices. Soli the bonds. Turn in your signed applications,
with check or cash, to your nearest bank or postoffice or any
member of the BPW or Soroptimlst club. Then report your
sale to Judith Brown, phone 5193, and your name will be
published on the Honor Roll, which will be a lasting testi
monial to the patriotic women of Klamath county.
LET'S SHOW THE JMEN HOW TO SELL BOND8I
. . .DON'T WAITI , DO IT NOWI 1 ; '
for a little exclleuwr--'
of fluid, and the continued pres
ence ot a sort mass, which may
be unacthetic.
More frequently, tlio lining of
the sacs develops tabs or ad
hesions or even bone-like de
posits. These may be painful
and prevent satisfactory or com
fortable use of the adjacent joint.
The treatment of these chronic
irritations of the bursae is much
more difficult than a simple
acue injury to the bursa. Com'
plete rest and Immobilization,
augmented by the application of
heat and massage, may be tried,
but often it Is necessary for the
surgeon to remove the whole
bursa.
Stepin Fetchit
Gets 30 Days in
House of Correction
CHICAGO, July 22 (F)-Uiv
coin A. (Stepin Fetchit) Perry,
negro comedian, was sentenced
today to 30 days in the house of
correction on a charge of con
tributing to the delinquency of a
minor.
Judge Joseph B. Hermes of
Jury cdurt, who convicted Perry
after trial without a jury, stayed
execution of sentence for 60 days
pending an appeal.
Chrysler Finishes
Ten Thousand Tanks
DETROIT. July 22 (VP) The
Chrysler corporation disclosed
today that it has. completed Its
10,000th medium weight tank
at the Detroit tank arsenal.
Chrysler received its first
tank order on August 15, 1940.
By the end of 1941 it was more
than six months ahead of sched
ule and in December 1942 it
monthly production was greater
than its entire output for 1941.
More Stirrup Pumps
For Sale at Chamber
A new shipment of ten stirrup
pumps has arrived at the cham
ber of commerce and, are for
sale at a nominal cost.
The pumps have a number of
uses besides that of putting out
fifes caused by Incendiary bombs
for which they were originally
designed. Persons who bought
a pump from the first shipment
are using them to spray peaches,
ball out boats, paint, etc.
Five Calves Given
To Contest Winners
Five winners In Sear 4-H club
dairy contest were presented
their calves recently. The calves
are pure-bred Jersey calves and
are given by Sears as pfi;es in
the annual essay contest.
Donna Dixon, Bruce Crawford,
Joanne Steyskal, Paul Clark,
and Marie June Tibbits, were
winners who were given the
calves.
SEATTLE, July 23 OP) Boe
ing Alrcrnft company announced
today it probnbly would estub
lish eight or nlno branch plants
in western Washington in ef
forts to solve tho manpower
shortage by "taking work to
the people."
A. W. Jacobsen, branch plants
superintendent, said the pro
gram at present contemplates
plants in Belllngham, Stmiwooil,
Tacoma, Chehalis, Olymplu,
Everett and Hoqutam.
A plant at Aberdeen was an
nounced previously. Jacobsen
said more than one might be
established In a single commun
ity.
The company, needing 9000
additional workers, has under
consideration a plan to Increase
production at Its Seattle plants
by establishing
shifts a day.
two 10-hou
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Pace One)
er proof of our amazingly com
plete mastery of sea and air.
You may be quito sure the
British fleet wasn't just buggy'
riding around and taking pot
shots for the fun of it. It had an
OBJECTIVE.
Since the bombing of Rome's
vast freight yards, the enemy Is
probably being forced to use thu
roundabout railroad route down
Italy s cast coast and across the
heel, sole and toe of th boot-
Italy has two main rail lines,
one down the east coast and the
other down the west, with few
and inefficient connecting lines,
The British navy Is further in
terruptng these communications.
a a a'
THE German radio says today
the Russians have launched a
new attack near Leningrad. If
so, it means that fighting Is now
under way in Russia from th
Arctic to the Sea of Azov.
The Russians STARTED It,
and it rather looks like they're
using SUPERIOR forces to ex
pand the fighting front to keep
the Germane from shuttling re
inforcement back and forth
from front to front.
At least, we hope so.
a a
fERMAN reserves, rushed In
by forced marches, are
counter-attacking viciously at
Orel, but the Russians roll on to
within nine miles (polntblank
artillery range) of the city.
Hitler Is said to have ordered
Orel held "at all costs."
He ordered Stalingrad to be
taken at all costs.
a a a
A SPOKESMAN for Admiral
Halscy says today that U. S
ground troops are now within
a few thousand yards of Mun-
da airfield, which, he says, is
In reach of capture."
Most of the Jap artillery, ha
adds, has been knocked out (re
member our dive bombers at
tacking Jap gun positions there
the other day) and the Japs are
righting chiefly with mortars,
machine guns and small arms.
The Jap resistance, the spokes
man "ys, is deteriorating rapid,
ly, and there Is no sign of Jan
reimorcements getting through
our naval and air blockade of
the Island.
a
'THE Japs are fighting from pill
boxes and foxhole.
Incidentally, their habit 1 to
dig DEEP foxholes, roofed over
with logs. A useful method of
getting at them in these burrows
has been to throw In thermite
grenades, which burn with a
heat of several thousand de
grees, rather thoroughly roast
ing the dug-ln occupants.
a a a
f""N the home front, there's a
n . i . , .
4-t-duur stoppage way of.
l,oi Angeles cars and busses In
protest against WLB's refusal to
grant a 10-cents-an-hour wage
Increase.
The bus and car workers are
undoubtedly annoyed with what
they regard as unjustified wage
discriminations, but if you were
fighting In Sicily or the Solomons
you woujdn t have a great deal
of patience with their method of
manifesting their annoyance.
You'd probably be perfectly
willing to trade places with them
even at current wages.
Convicts Complete
Ration Book Three
Mailing Early
PORTLAND, July 22 ()
ine job or writing, checking, ad
dressing and mailing ration book
No. 3 to every applicant in Ore
gon, was completed three days
Deiore tne July zi deadline, OPA
Director Richard G. Montgom
ery said today. The work was
done by inmates of the state pen
itentiary at Salem.
Distribution of book No. 3 so
far shows an increase of 11,221
oyer 1,164,897 books No. 2. the
total for May.
Jutt got back from the East
In time yesterday to run In to
a few places and talk . Good.
na. it's easy ie shop in Klam
ath Fallsl ... In New York
shopping is a long, tiresome job,
I
N one ot th shop on the
Grand Concourse under
Radio City I found a Mexi
can shop full of clever Im
ports . . . Much like one of
the underground shops ot tho
i'lilmer llouso in Chlcugo . . ,
So you can Imagine how smug
I felt when I looked In Gsrce
Ion's window yesterday after
noon and saw some ot the same
Mexican things!
Yes, "smug" is the word . . .
Because tho more I see away
from home, the more satisfied
I am with Klamath Fails.
Garcelon's doesn't make a big
play on the "good neighbor pol
Icy In showing these clever
hand-made Mexican Import,
but th store does have most of
the practical, usable items.
There are chairs, floor mat
to use on the porch or th lawn
baskets, table linen, picnic
nampers. shopping bags, etc.
And attractive decorated oven
ware . . . The very same things
at Garcelons you will find in
exclusive shops selling nothing
out Mexican imponsi
T
HE difference between the
drugstores of the West and
those In other part of the
country amazing ... It
looks as if the drugstore
In th longer-settled area have
remained static slnco the 1890's,
and, from tho looks of the pack
ages, you get the idea that some
of the merchandise is that old,
too.
In Washington wa had a
chance to see quite a few drug
stores, because I could feel a
slight case ot heat exhaustion
coming on and was trying to
find some salt tablet . . . (Inci
dentally, none wa available be
cause of the run on salt tablet
before we arrived).
In New York, just for fun, I
wandered into a few drugstore
Because by that time I had
begun to wonder if th West
were the only place where mod.
em drugstores existed ... I'd
found only old-fshoned on in
Nebraska, too.
Well, In New York there are
some which have been modern
ized, but not many, considering
the number ... In Chicago w
went into one, to look at th
telephone book, and were sur
prised to find that the modern
exterior covered the same an
tique insldes.
In the alg cities, anyway, you
find only a small stock of cos
metics of the more Inexpensive
type ... In the same display
case with patent medicines or
cigarettes ... No nice perfumes
like the line carried at Currln's
For Drugs.
In fact, line like Rublnstaln,
Schlaparelll, LaLong, Worth,
Tussy, etc., were not to be found
In any drugstore I saw in the
Middle West or East . . . These
are high-class product which
either have their own exclusive
little shop or separate depart-
mepts In the better department
stores.
And are they hard to findl
, . In Naw York you can call
up the Buyers' Service and ask
where the product can be found
And after holding the phone
for about 15 minutes, you'll get
the information.
The cosmetic department at
Currln's look like similar de
partment In the best big de
partment stores, or the cosmetic
'bars ' In the speeialty shops
But wltn these differences
At Currln's you have a
choice ot several high-type
brand and aren't high-pressured
into buying anything.
From the above paragraphs
you probably have gotten the
impression that I'm more than
ever satisfied with Klamath
Falls and Currln's . . . Which is
right!
Qatceicti
HOl'PlNQ for clothe In
Now York Is a tiresome
chore that you can't under
stand when you're used to
shopping In Klamuth Falls.
My sister-in-law wanted a
dress to wear on the train . . ,
One that she could use In Spo
kane, too, whore my brother is
stationed.
Well, the smaller dress shop
like tho onos I'm used to in
Klamath Falls, wore too expen
sive, she said ... Of course,
the clothes are beautiful, with
hand-nindo this and that, but
she didn't want to pay $75 or
so for a little summer dress.
In the department stores you
are lucky If you get waited on
in half an hour . . . And you
are transferred from one drens
department to another, on dif
ferent floors.
Then you have to take the
subway, bus or a taxi to the
next store, bocause distance are
too great to walk . . . And you
still can't find what you want.
We wasted hours looking for
the type of dress she wanted
Ono similar to a dress I d
bought at Whytal's before I left
. . . And finally, after Id gone
on to Boston, Lillian gave up
and bought a one-piece that
wasn't what she'd had In mind
at all . . . Simply because sh
had to have a dress and couldn't
take any more time shopping.
When I dropped in at Why
tal's thl morning, I looked
round and breathed sigh of
relief ... If Lillian could have
done her dress shopping there,
she would have found a choice
of so many kinds that her diffi
culty would hav been In try
ing to make up her mind which
she liked the beat . . . It's mar
velous to live In a city this sliet
In cities where the population
has Increased tremendously flu
to war workers, things are
bought up so fsst that there is
no selection to choose from . . .
Merge Whytal told me thl
morning that the girl connect
ed with the carnival here hav
bought and bought at Whytal's
. . . Because they couldn't find
the merchandise In other citlr
or couldn't spend th time trsv.
ling from one store or depart.
ment to another, trying to find
clothes they liked. , ,
The more I saw of big cities
during the last month, the more
I realized what a really wonder
ful (election of EVERYTHING
we have In Klamath Falls . . .
Marga Whytal nd I had a sort
of enthusiasm contest, because
she has been to Los Angeles and
Seattle while I nave been East
And we both think wa're
lucky to live In Klamath Fallsl
As teen a I arrived In KItm-
ath Falls yttrdv morning I
brd a number of dlipsnalng
rmrks about th weather . . .
But It was from paopl who
don't knew what weather Is . . ,
They ought to try th Mlddl
Wtt or the Est during th
Summer, and they'd soon find
out . . . Th weather In Kltnv
ah Fall Is WONDERFUL!
13 Years
Of Negatives
On Filel
Since 1930
Kenntll-Ellls
Hat Kept
All Negatives
On File
For Your
Convenience
Come In'. . .
Look Them Over
And Order From I
Those Old Proofs .
You May Have
Forgottenl
Kennell-Ellis
Main and Sth Puen 5M
U. 8. Nat'l Bank Bide..
s