Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1943)
PAGE FOUB HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FAIAS. OREGON July 28, 1948 , MAtr Ta Assoeuna Fiats V. jtHodiM rrw k d. Mlf ,111111k) to Uj, of r auMMtloa of !) m ctlipaldm r..ml to I of wi em!t4 tl th oopw. Mid aln Mi. looll am soblUhod Ikanla. All ntu nsnMUtUoa of SMttl III Ik) w ! FRANK JENKINS A Unttm maMuttae of tk Snotst ! M tilt Klanwt Saviw K&luto tnooa utpl Snda Bluado 111 ru lUMti. EluwUi rslls, On, It W IMal ubtu Co. ud th. Uuutk wi FttbUtnlms OoiptMy I.Wrvl M mo4 Um Hit U tin MaffMi iiutt Mb, Or. w Awurt Ml im infer Ml of mum w. ' Jfer Ararr Bnste Or Caecum XtsnHaM ViUattltr by . Wut-Houimt Co, lxc 1,1 TruelMO, ln Tof. S ttl, C&texo. rorttiad, to MALCOLM EPLEY JfMte Miter .-J jit Today's Roundup Br MALCOLM EPLEY DICK MONTGOMERY, director of tha Port land office of OPA, wii In town this week. We sat down for a half-hour chat with him r i ' about OPA, particularly as re- 1 0nrH nnhlic reaction to its program. On the logger feeding ques tion, of course, Mr. Montgom ery gave us the distinct im pression he believes in hewing, rigidly to the letter of the reg ulations. Do that, he said, and any unsound or unjust situa tion will eventually right it self. The undesirable features EPLEY will be highlighted for those with authority to change the letter of the regulations. "Differential rationing" treating one group differently from another is bad business, Mr. Montgomery said. In this connection, shipyard workers were mentioned in comparison with loggers who eat at cookhouses. That brought out some interesting discussion. While it must be agreed that shipyard workers are performing vital work and- should be nour ished properly to carry on that work, there are some significant differences in their living routine. ; Many shipyard workers live with their fam ilies, permitting some flexibility in the use of food points. Shipyard worker work in the cities, where they can supplement the meal, diet with a sandwich, a candy bar, or a milk shake. This writer has visited ' both shipyards ' and logging camps, and he is inclined to the belief that on the average, there is greater physical exertion on the logging job. Lumberjacks who eat at cookhouses are pretty much at the mercy of the cookhouse so far as their feeding goes. ' They don't have -much chance, while on the job, to supplement their regular meals, and they have to take what is made available to them. Hunger in the Open THERE is another point which occurs to us, but which wouldn't get to first base if pre sented to a governmental authority. We have the idea that there is something about the woods that makes for bigger appetites. Maybe it's the smell of the-forest, or the condition of the air in the hills, or just the reaction of mind and body to an awareness of being out in the big" open spaces. . Anyone who has been on a camping trip knows what we are talking about, but we don't anticipate that idea will change ny laws. We don't mean to convey the impression that In this little discussion, Mr. Montgomery was unsympathetic with the problem of providing adequate eats for loggers. But he stuck to a strict OPA theory of adherence to regulations generally established until they are changed, whereas our idea has been that conscientious and competent local boards should have au thority to handle local situations as the circum stances dictate. Nature Won't Wait for ODT ONE trouble with waiting for an unsound situation to right itself is that a lot of things can happen before flexibility is forced upon a generally established regulation. Widely told is the story of the sheepman who was in dire need of gasoline to get around in his business during lambing season. He wrote to the ODT for help. Back came a letter, suggesting that he post pone the lambing season. "Conscientious" Point Users ONE interesting turn in the conversation had to do with a public idea that, whether the family or individual needs it or not, every ration point should be used up in each period. Some people, in fact, seem to think the law requires the use of all points. Mr. Montgomery recalled that while on the train, he had overheard the conversation of two women who were traveling from, their homes to a different part of the country. They were wondering if they would be able to use their ration points in their new location. Mr. Montgomery moved into the conversation and asked the ladies if it had occurred to them that maybe they shouldn't use any ration points unnecessarily, by that restraint contributing a bit to the general improvement of the food situation. They were interested. The idea had never occurred to them, and no doubt there are many others who "conscientiously" use every ration point. -'" Likewise, it is obvious that the natural and human reaction to involuntary rationing makes the rationed article highly desirable. We have a friend who, it always seemed to us made a special point out of drinking milk while those around him drank coffee. He gave us the. idea that he looked disdainfully upon our abuse of our bodies while, he was building his up with the nourishing fluid from the cow. ' -Since' coffee rationing went into effect, we hav been' at table a few times with this friend. Nothing has been said, but we have noticed that he invariably takes coffee. After the War MR. MONTGOMERY has the opinion that the greatest pressure against such re straints as are now imposed by OPA will come immediately after the war. He thinks the work of OPA or a similar agency will be more vitally necessary than ever then, to curb a trend to ward inflation. He has noted, he said, that people tend to stay more closely within bounds when the war news is bad. Violations of OPA regulations rise when the news turns good. That is one basis of his expectation of what will happen when the war is over. SIDE GLANCES . mi ry iroa; iT.mpntMT. or. fto cuying me nurse una ouguy v asn t a bad Idea, iicorgc. but please stop telling everybody you courted me in a rig just iiKe imsi The War Today By Dewrrr MacKZNzrc. ITALY'S dismal predicament and its far-reaching moral effect are likely to make the way of transgressor Hitler exceedingly hard in the not distant future. . The way things now are developing it wouldn't be surprising to see the nazi chief attempt the major operation of maWpg a sweep ing withdrawal on all fronts to restricted bound aries which he would try to defend against the allies come one, come alL Strengthened by this consolidation he would battle for a stale mate, hoping not only to save the reich but salvage some of his ill-got gains. The length of time which must elapse before the all highest undertakes such a last-stand move obviously depends on how hard the allies are able to push him. That in turn hinges on the speed with which the Anglo-American brotherhood is able to clean up the Italian sit uation and strike elsewhere. In yesterday's column I pointed out the great threat which would be created to the present German battle-line in Russia if the western allies should follow the Italian collapse with an invasion of the Balkans. A successful drive up the Balkan peninsula would force the nazis to undertake the terribly dangerous feat of pulling back their entire front, assuming that soviet pressure was maintained. It's most unlikely that this could be achieved without corresponding withdrawals in western Europe. Hitler's position would be so pre carious on the eastern front during his retreat that he wouldn't dare leave his forces scattered throughout the occupied areas of the west. More over, we are reminded of another circumstance by British Prime Minister Churchill who yes terday told a cheering house of commons: Spirit of Revolt 1 1 THE spirit of. revolt rises higher in all I subjugated lands. German rule is main tained from the north cape of Norway to the Island of Crete only by hideous and ruthless cruelty, reprisals and massacres." The Greeks, the Yugoslavs, the Czechoslovak iang, the Poles, the French, The Belgians, the Dutch, the Norwegians all these tortured folk are merely waiting for the signal to throw themselves on their oppressors. Indeed, Yugo slav guerrilla forces never have ceased to wage bitter war on the invaders, and the ferocity of these attacks has increased with the weak ening of Italy. The idea of Hitler withdrawing to a restrict ed area for final defense isn't new. Military observers long have foreseen its inevitability when the Germans got hard pressed. The fuehrer, perhaps on the Insistance of his high command, has had' his final defenses prepared. ne iirsi stage oi a general withdrawal in Russia presumably would be to the line of the river Dnieper, as. remarked yesterday. How ever, if things were going badly with the Ger mans this would be only an intermediate stop, for their final destination would carry them at least into Poland. On the western front. Hitler Is said to have had the two vast and "invulnerable" fortified lines with which the war started the French Maginot and the German westwall prepared for the defense of the fatherland. Many other strategic strong points have been got ready for the show-down. WAR KITCHEN CREAM CHEESE FILLING ENRICHES CINNAMON ROLL Br GAYNOR MADDOX No matter how rushed your war worker is, he will pause long enough to enjoy a cinna mon snail with fruit and cream cheese filling or a golden slab of French toast served with honey or jam. Both these dishes combine flour with other sus taining nutrients into agreeable wake-up food that sticks to the ribs and keeps the worker up to his job until lunch time. Fried pressed cereal is an other hearty "stick-to-the-ribs" breakfast item. Pack cooked cereal into square djsh and stand overnight. Slice in' thick stripe, roll in flour, and fry in bacon drippings. Serve with jam, honey or syrup. Cinnamon Snails With Cream Cheese Filling (Makes 3 H dosen rolls about 4 inches in diameter) One cake compressed yeast or 1 package granular yeast ft cup lukewarm water, 2 tea spoons salt, H cup sugar, cup fat, 1 cup boiling water, 1 cup irradiated evaporated milk, 1 egg, 6 ' cups sifted enriched flour, about cup raisins, washed and drained well, cream cheese filling. Dissolve yeast in the luke warm water. .Add salt, sugar and fat. to the boiling water, and stir until fat is melted.-Add milk. When lukewarm, add. dis solved yeast. Beat in half of the flour. Cover and let rise until double in bulk. Then add beat en egg and remainder of flour. Knead until smooth and elastic. Put into well-greased bowl, cover and let rise again until double in bulk. Roll dough to tt-inch thickness. Spread with cream cheese filling, sprinkle with raisins find roll up like jelly roll. Cut roll into Vs-inch slices. Place on greased baking sheet, cut side down, allowing HOYT TELLS DUTIES ""!' .11.. .i.iiii.iii.ii mi m From the Klamath Republican July 23, 1903 -George Grizzle, proprietor of the East End Marble Works, is being kept busy filling out orders for tombstones and monuments. Two employes of the S. S. Mitchell ranch got gloriously drunk in town last Saturday and staged a knock-down fight in rront Of the opera house. It took the loser about two hours to re gain consciousness in Dr. Hsr aus' office. As we have no day marshal, a man can get drunk and disorderly here and create most any kind of disturbance witnout interference. From the Klamath News July 28, 1933 Labor difficulties continued at a peak here today, with plants down in the lumber strike. Ap proximately 1500 workers are idle. District headquarters of Safe way stores are to be transferred to Klamath Falls. MIAMI. Fin. ftPl Hon t & Green forgot during an address nere mat nis speech was being broadcast. Twice he ' marl which he quickly assured his vis ible audience were "off the rec- ora." v , , The third time he spoke in confidence, he suddenly remem bered the mike before him wss "alive," and muffled It with his hand while he made his point. "Mission to Moscow'' Well Received in Russian Showing MOSCOW, July 28 (P) The smiling face of former Ambas sador Joseph E. Davies looked down on the milling streets of Moscow today from big colored posters on the fronts of movie houses showing his "Mission to Moscow." The picture had its first pub lic showing here last night and was well received, though Rus sian audiences were amused at some of Hollywood's ideas of Russian life. Only minor cuts were made in the version shown here. For in stance, a scene in the American embassy where the secretaries tell Davies that walls have been tapped was deleted. Russians watched the famous Moscow trial scenes with intense interest. LOS ANGELES, July 28 (IP) Palmer Hoyt, director of the domestic branch of the office of war information, says his unit should: Get all the news from the army and navy, and give all of it to the public that can be given without telling the enemy what he shouldn't know. And, on the other hand, he stated in an Interview yesterday: "There are two things the OWI should not do. ' It should not act as a censor and it should not pamphleteer and propagand ize. It was pamphleteering and the suspicion of plugging for a fourth term that brought down the disapproval of congress on the domestic service of OWI." Let's Go DANCING THIS SAT. NITE At the ARMORY BALDY'S BAND Regular Admission Prices room to spread. Brush tops with evaporated milk, sprinkle with sugar, cover and let rise until double in bulk. Bake in a moderate oven (375 degrees F.) until browned, about 25 min utes. Cream Chan Filling Two packages of cream cheese, 13 cup sugar, 1 tea spoon vsnilla extract. Mash cheese with a fork. Blend in sugar and vanilla un til filling is soft and smooth. (Eat the Baste 7 Every Day) BREAKFAST: Tomato and lemon juice, dry whole-wheat cereal, cinnamon " snails with cream cheese filling, tea, milk. LUNCHEON: French toast, syrup, salted peanuts, cabbage, colon and sliced radish salad, tea. milk. DINNER: Dried lima bean casserole in leftover meat gravy and tomato sauce, beet greens with sliced hard-cooked egg, raw carrot sticks, whole wheat bread, butter or fortified margarine, sponge cake with fresh strawberry sauce, tea, milk. - Telling The Editor IMtan ariM km mat mi m non than im wm M Mnsth, wl M mil Ian HfiMt w ONI IIOl al im MP" Ml, a i M M UrM. Owlrlbullwl MlMti (MM ratal, v MtrmJf riOURWO ON TAXES KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., (To the Editor) We now have with us the "current payment plan" of income taxes, commonly known ax the "pay-as-you-go feature of the income tax law. The 1942 Income statute Is not changed In the rates of pay ment or any other feature, ex cept there is "tacked on" this new fcaturo of withholding, or saving up the money with which to pay our Income tax, and hav ing same turned over and paid during the current year of 1943. The withholding feature applies to those working for salary or wages and a certain percentage of such earnings are withheld by the employer, and will be credited to all such employees, but they will still be required to tile their annual Income tax return. This feature of the law. is pretty well understood by all because it has been so constant ly before them. However, there is another as pect of the law which Is not so well understood, and for this reason, I would like to make the following observation, in re gard thereto. All business men and profes sional men and in fact everyone having an Income, except the wage earners above mentioned, and the farmers with them will have to prepare an estimate of this year's (1943) income on or before September 15, which is not very far away. This estimate, will approxi mate the total Income for the year (1943) current Income. The tax thereon will bo computed Just exactly as the tax was computed for 1942, rates, allow ances, credits, etc. When this year's total tax. has thus been estimated, and the whole years tax so determ ined, then the taxpayer will be credited with the two payments which he has made, if he has made any, and the balance of tax due will be made In two payments, one to be sent In on or before Sept. 15, and the other on or before Dec. 15, this year so that current payment may be accomplished within the year. On or before the 15th of March, 1944, the taxpayer will have to prepare his annual, cor rect and exact, income tax re turn for 1943, and if he has paid too much on his "estimat ed return" he will be refunded and If he has paid too little. Dr. Masters' Health Column Real Way to Reduce Is to Cut Down on Your Diet By DR. THOMAS D. MASTERS Several months' experience with rationing of food shows surprisingly little evidence that those who are overweight are correcting thnt condition by liv ing within the law. With the home front and production Una domanding health and effi ciency as never before, the hm ards of obesity are being stressed In many quarters, and nny number of diets and regi mens of living mo being put beforo the public on how to re duce wcltiht properly. All these pieces of competent advica stress the prime Impor tance of not eating moio fowl than the body requires since reduction of food is the ouo und only way to get thinner, mid there are no short cuts. Fur thermore, sound reducing diets all contain 'the foods essential to healthful living meat, fish, fowl, milk, cheese, egga, fruit, vegetables, and whole . wheat bread or cereals. They concen trate on eliminating non-essen-tlal foods like sugars and starches, while cutting drasti cally, but not eliminating, de sirable fnti liko butU'r. In short, all authorities agree on recom mending the averago adrquate diet with a difference of quan tity only. REDUCING NO FUN The psychology of reducing properly Is not treated corn- he will be required to pay the difference. Remember that all 1042 tax payments made, apply to paying on the 1943 tax. The 1042 tax that you have contended with Is oil "washed-up except the so-called "unforglven lax." If your tax for last year was not to exceed $08 67. it Is all for given and you can forizet It. If It was more than that, say $80.00, ttirn you will still owe one forth of that tax or $20.00 which you can pay, half of It In 1944 and the other half In 1945. This unforglven tax cannot be yet definitely determined, until your 1943 tax Is finally determ ined; for they will forgive 73 of either 1942 or 1943, which ever is the lower. Farmers do not have to make the current estimate as outlined above, until December 13, this year, otherwise they will pay all of their balance of 1943 tax right then to mako them up to date (current). So, better get you ready for the figuring now begins. Yours respectfully, WM. F. B. CHASE. pletely enough, however, by most exports on reducing, and is probably of great Importance In all Instances. There are lev oral states of mind to take Into account, if tho diet is to be fol lowed consistently and with relative ease and permanence, Reduction of food means that the reducer must cope with the sensations of hunger, Also, he Is likely to become obsessed with tho problem he Is trying to solve, to the exclusion of other Intarosts. Finally the slowness of a sound reducing procedure can be very burden some, and many may dislike cutting out alcohol, which has a high caloric value. On the happier side of the ledger, to be weighed, surely, against the disadvantages men tioned above, are the Increased efficiency to be gained by at taining one's proper weight, which In adult life should be regularly one's Ideal weight at tho ago of 30 tho achievement of Improved appearance (al ways of advantage economical ly and esthetlcally) added com fort In movement and ease In finding ready-to-wear clothing. In addition, the excellent cor seting methods oi the present for both men and women do much to build morale and sup port the body while Its owner Is striving toward the Intelli gent modern conception of good bodily shape. TRY BIX MEALS There are several things to do, fortunately, that can make the onerous task of reducing less weighty. First of all, it Is advisable to Interest oneself In a variety of things that take the mind off the issue In hand. Next, one may divide one's dally allotment of nutriment (somewhere between 800 and 1200 calories never leu than 600) Into five or six meals, In stead of three, thus keeping the hunger pangs at bay. And last, one can check his loss, not only by scale, but by Inches and In crested case of clothing. All these tricks and small satisfac tions may contribute materially to the end In view, which la a healthy and normal physique. ART EUREKA, Calif., OF) Federal Dist. Judge A. F. St, Sure ar rived for tho summer court ses sion, saw mural paintings of pell cans and pigs adorning the court roomand asked the County Bar association to have someone take mem oown wuicjciy, pieasei 0 rS ALWAYS WORTH WAiTMS FOR... Sometimes Blitz-WVinhard Is temporarily out "s':;3 ffvii the picture. But it's always worth waiting for. Its 87-year $hJ!J$ m tradition 'of excellence is your guarantee of unvarying quality iX ft ,(v,v and complete satisfaction. If your dealer ' uIfOJi is out of Blitz-Weinhard today, remember, there will be gt li Bliti-Weinhard on his shelves in a day or two. uj K s5)(u!h JiSC. St Keop ashing for it by name M it a limn ' II II II II rllliilliilliilliilliil v -7iV II HlmT7 II II II II Jlllllll II II Mill T- r-r-IL - iiXMU: DECR BLITZ-WIINNARD CO. PORTLAND, OSMON i