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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1944)
r 1, 1W HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORtCON PACE THREE demobilization for r Li n r i Army iviay oe aiow; Other Agencies Fast ljcC ...r.,.iiiif thu least infor- M J,,' much seems tt-r- P.', ,,Mii.ibillziitloii will ';l0; inil will bu IOIW Oil Sklual basin rather hail evidence Unit F. GREEN Scut. I (!') Inn III III" m ill mill "I"".. ImlKlllllIll UBllUCt Of II U I I O II to lllU 01 IU Ull W"-T ... 7 IlillXfl' ivr ".,.,. V'"" , ml IV " jpalloi Tlicro mi. la " Tm n I 'red. 'l'llu 1.'0 :"? of IWKOi-x. for example, '? ,l ni ului to postwar con- I apparently i i" fclC ' ......i ,, tmllllsyK- l'r. ":.!, .,'ilv helm! drafted, 1 boIiW representlm! mml " r'?l..LUi. lonuth of ri-lce co..ibl duty, and so on. E .idler with Urn niusl points L, homo first. " t Viral tin only clrniobll Iwillon ex- Lcd after Cicrmiiny inn r'v1 " i r..rn-. Homo it troop'. .nf """" """" ill .. Into till Ilt'lllV "V Cumn mil rift(l. i1' i.., ,tniv win bo rar w.v"i7." i,i. ,i. iufcrred t " menu; Between tlio 'nil Germany d tint of Jnpi.... army " II bo cllnchnm"! while "mo th continue to be LiiM (Some clvlllnn offlclnls lull the dlschnriio rate will thither.) After Jnpnn's (nil. t exodus of 500.000 to 000,. bo month l expected. Illifrc ro loiiKiT-rnnito plnns, 111 In the "suKKCsllon" bUikc, Uti it utrcnmlinlnu tho nrmcd btM BKMIISl liuuru .Tii.viH fcta. They Include: I A nrmiost'd mt'ritcr of tlio iir and nuvy (lepnrimnnm im I tinffle department or ni.uonni Umm. w 111 .our arms; iiuiu . ilr ond n supply force com Son to nil three. Tlio nnvy In fccostd, 1. Combined officer training, fap In n suiulo military emy. no Hint future mill leaders would learn war u whole. 3. Universal mllltiiry service. loins officials believe this fright meet congressional ap Itoval more rcndily tlu.n the icar of "Kovernmcnt service imposed by President Rooso (flt, because the hitter has tho lounri of n relief niiciicy. Olhcr post-buropcan-wnr nnrt oil-Pacific war plans lire most Jiily summarized by uuencles: OWI workers Office of wnr information (000 workers): expects a licnvy uraln fter tlio Germnn plu.se i reversliiK tlio flow o( arms id men from cast to west, but Iter Japan's fall will (old up ulckly. If tho Immcdlntc fu lure ii confronted by tho "Oc tober hump" In roll freight piovcmcnt. a clanKcrous short- he of henvv truck tires, nnri n hipply of usabio pusscuKer cars i Kill Set down near tho rinnuer ivcl. War labor bonrd (2300 cm loyes): may bo Involved In an IHa Cnmntlnn nf nnt.nfnn,....! tibor activities under lnbor do rjrtmcnt, with r'EI'C (fair em Payment prnctlccs committee) no NLRB wrapped In. This 'Ian Ij mcrelv nt thn rnntinran. . Nnal slac. acicctivo i c r v 1 c (22,000 ' Mkcrs): nt nri.,..i ho. nn ffoitwar future . I' 1.1JIIK . wans gel old jobs bnck. Tlio ncncy lives (rimi one May 15 to tlio next, at thu will of congress. War nianpowor commllnn (25,0110 workers): will not out last the wnr very long, but 21,000 of its employes are In Hi" U, S. employment service, a permanent agency which will nave u vital role In the mint. wnr Job-hunt. War Shippers War shinning aiiminisLrnl Inn (11,000 workers): will liquidate after tho war, will, maritime commission taking over. veterans' admin strnl on (50.. 000 employes): vast expansion ahead, and many headaches, in eluding veterans' education, un employment Insiiranco and gunr nnteelng of veterans' ' loans. along with its permanent tasks including Hospitalization, relut bllltatlon. pensions. Petroleum administration for wnr (120(1) and solid fuels ad ministration (075): expire when mo war ends. Future Uncertain War production board (15 000): future uncertain. 11ns not nsked for postwnr powers, but some federal controls over some aenrce Items may bo need ed nfler tho pence: Chnirman Nelson has mentioned lumber, tin and crude rubber as ex amples. Tho agency has been getting smaller for a year, and will end with tlio peace unless extension Is ordered. All In all, tho government Is now fnr better prepared (or tho end of hostilities than on Arm istice Day. 1018. Tho first World War ended while officials still considered It "pro-Germnn" to talk of penco plans. This gov' eminent, alone among the major belligerents, had created no re construction agency. Uaruch, today the "elder statesman," then the head of tho wnr Industries board, was quoted officially less than month before the 1018 armis tice as disapproving any "dis cussion now of after-lhc-war plans and policies. Evidently having learned a lesson, Bnruch has been the spark plug of this war s program of preparedness lor peace. Lane, Stone Bound Over to Jury DALLAS. Sept. 1 (VP) Elmer Lane and Malley A. Stono were bound over to tho grand Jury under $15,000 bond each at a preliminary henring In Justice court here yesterday, on charg es of robbing tho Grande Ronde bunk, They were nrrcstcd August 22 in Boise, Idaho. FBI agents said they had $0400 in their possession. Flashes of Life . I'l CHANGES IDE IN POINTS By The Associated Press HATS SPOKANE. Wash. Hardly nnyone wants 25 white rats. Deputy Sheriff Mons Ulvln learned after he arrested a mun. who used Hie rodents to test his food before dinner. Ulvlu was rcadv to 1nln his capllvo In the psychopathic ward after vain attempts to glvo tho mis io; several physicians, lion zuga university, the county health officer and a medical laboratory. He flnully left them at a hospital with a note saying: "Compliments of Dr. X." w m w CLOSE CALL EVANSVILLE. Ind. Tho old army saw about shells having your number on them" Is no bunk, says Lt. John R. Slatcn of Kenneth Square, Pa, Ho wrolo Evnnsvllln relatives Unit ills Liberator bomber crow recently found a piece of flak embedded In thc ship ofler a raid. Tho fink hnd the number SOB written on it nnd 508 is the number of LI. Slater's plane. HERE'S HOPING BEDFORD, I n d. Greater faith In advertising hath no man than thc author of thc following classified advertisement in thc Bedford Times-Mall: "Notice Any amount of money sent to me by anyone at any time will be grcotly appreci ated. I sure need It. Bert Phlpps, Route 5. Bedford." TO WORK AND REST BROADUS, Mont. Her Job as superintendent of Powder River schools should be cosy for LiHiun Hclskarl after thc vacation she's been through. She spent thc summer on her parents' Min nesota farm driving a tractor, shocking grain, canning food, tending chickens, milking thc cow, (ceding hogs, hoeing gar-dens. English Girls Finish Test Despite Robot Bomb Raids WASHINGTON. Sent. 1 (TP) No ration points will be required iu ijuiuiiudu uiy ueuiis, xrun Bui- let's ana prune juices Between September 3 and September 30, nnd other changes in bluo point values generally will bo minor. An exception is pineapple Juice, which advances from 15 to 25 points for a No. 2 (18-ounce) can. Fruit butters which become free include apple, apricot, grape and peach. Thc zero point value applies only to raw dry beans, regard less of variety or color. Ration points will continue on all, varieties of canned dry bcuns. Changes In point values for processed food included: Corn, vacuum-packed, whole kernel, 12-ounce can only, 3 to 5, points; mixed vegetables, such as succotash and carrots ana eas, No. 2 (18-ounce can) 10' to points: tomato juice, 7-ounce container, 1 to 2, 7-ounce con tainer, 1 to 3, 10-14 ounce con talner, 1 to 4. Boys Admit Theft Of Ammunition ASTORIA Sept. 1 (VP) Thc theft of 1000 rounds of ammuni tion from Fort Stevens was be lieved solved today with the ar rest of four small boys from Hammond. Police said the youngsters ad mitted taking tne sneiis when they called at the army post to see tnoir parents, civilian em ployes there. TACOMA, Sept. 1 (P) How a class of English school girls carried on their matriculation examination while robot bombs soared overhead Is described by an English mother in a letter to a friend hero. "They couldn't leave thc room once thev had seen the exam papers, so had to remain during an alert and the sirens wer going all day long," she wrote. "Shirley (her daughter) was luckier than some as they sat in the library which adjoins the junior hall. In this hall the stago had been reinforced to make a shelter. "Teachers took turns to watch outside for buzz bombs and give warning if one was approaching, and thc girls were allowed to run under : the stage until it. had passed over or exploded." At every sound, she said, the girls stopped work and listened. When they recognized it as a plane "or heard a bang," they "relaxed and went on with their work." But when tho call "danger" came "they ran to tha shelter and were not allowed to speak to one another (during the exam period.) This of courso, slowed them up, although tha actual minutes spent in the sheL. terrwere allowed." VI understand," added tha mother hopefully, "that they (the . papers) will be marked leniently." Classified Ads Bring Results. Classified Ads Bring Results DOES YOUR ROOF LEAK? Guaranty Roofing Co. Just Arrived1. hor Immediate Delivery ; LONGINES Watches (From $65, Federal Tax Included) At Rickys Jewelers 700 Main' ! 7:15 p.m. LOWELL THOMAS NEWS TIME , DON LEE-MUTUAL Standard of California Coming! 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