Linbr 7, 1944 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE NINE it AH PRISONER lira Hi PROBLEM 6th War Loan Prizes a Hoiidermn, county r,;. .nti son-clary or tne niu iiiriii iiiixir Koo. returned Wednetduy ff. .H where lie uttend. f ' meeting "' ') "irm, "i!""" SnJirlnll mnillloon if pie ! lor tlic purpose of milking "i.. iii45 farm labor. V " luuod ' 'P in ii it a H transported P11' i.. iu.iv 41m nrftiitiecls . i.i.ina nf nul.of-atate fcr and wi ,,nan w . i ,.. , addition, in .used anu iiiiiii.. "?..' ...ft.ilu and I ho in. 14 Hour "I'l" . r lortarin sections In Oregon Ice p one or more membcra vv . I., fnmn laalMM Jt(im. Ihe r coi n y "'" tc n vc" . . I . ,v,.,i hmnrh nf tho irmv t( 01 Win " - , ' horde of German war prle- I rcpreSCIllHUVVa vi mv , '...i.i.,i.i-i.iI,iii nfrli'ii Rabor and extension acrvlco, I -i itAnrlfann. I'a " 'L.i. i enimtv ohnlr- I ihowed a 10 per cent In-: ,!e in iransiio.i ....... ..- I) the prospguv jui "' rniv service command Mid mere us v--. r and 1,1 " J . . .... .......1 If lh (rnuierii ko re to make up the ahortuKc .(rlcullurnl labor. Hcndoraon linurd. encral discussion of use of xlcan nntlonala Indicated c uncertainly aa to the nllly of this type of help l would be available next he meeting waa attended by roxlmalely 75 grower com rcmcn and representatives government agencies and nbers of agricultural pro Ini companlea, concluded derson. , ttiry Scmon, slate rcpreaen Ive and chairman Of the math county farm labor mlttee, accompanied Hen ion and la attending a meet of ieglalatlvc committees In Hand and Salem. EDITORIALS ON NEWS lonllnued from Page One) : .ITICAL ACTION for the Ma of Greece. With British 'armed forces Ming TOR one urceK laction must anotner, h is ooviuus Ihe Greek neoole HAVEN'T folate freedom of political ton. Britain, an outsider, is ERFEHINU, cro saying to the Brlllsli: want nothing to ao wun aphere-of-lnlluenco pro- I nrriNius is right. - His POLICY AS TO EUROPE Bbc overwhelmingly endorsed the common run of American Jfle, who want no slicking of ttrlcan fingers into Europe's Ileal affairs. lut what of LATIN-AMERICA Which r OUR sphere of in fice? What of Argentina, iHe government we don't like tare trying to weaken? that of China which MAY tour sphere of Influence ta seems little doubt that le been telling Chiang what or else. Vt wo ready to travel the KUS polltical-frccdom-for-alli Sits road? . TAIN ilmmt rertnlnlv titans business In Greece, for Is happening there bears pno wnoie British world- Jr ayalcm. It is inconcclv that Stalin isn't acutely in tea. e WBV In whloli Ihl. nrpnk cr keg Is handled will give i idvance view of the whom 1 field of post-war peace pos S'Im. If we and the British he Russians can settle this w ousineas amiably among r"""ui stirring up enmities will rnnkle nnd fester, It i as that among us we can Indie the world as to Insure fl'iu 1'ERIOD of peace and n lor manKind. Kll IV.. , I ml,. V2GET ALONG In this W TEST of tho unity that ke necessary If any consid- Part of our dreams for the Jr luture Is to bo realized "disconcerting to bo com- JjjE la a fascinating mystery 1 the World 0 lh( In wrlllpn. Jmographs (Instruments for Tm earthquakes at a dls r 'ell the selsmologlsti ynis of earthquakes) that l 's ucen a HUGE earth twInSi SOMEWHERE IN I VORLD. Maybe the most Jtctlvo In a generation. S,5nter isn't known but "jmoioguts are more or less JJj 'hat It MIGHT BE l1' might be somewhere JWhe ocean. It Is still a Tl WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 f'i A move to get more money for congressmen gathered force In the house today. Leaders of the drive, predict ing speedy succoss, said in creased funds are needed to keep up with the cost of living and with the boom 6f war time mail and extra duties. Accordingly, two plans are In motion: 1. To boost the salary of rep resentatives and senators from $10,000 to $12,500 yearly. ' 2. To Increase the clerk hire allowance o f representatives from S0300 to $9500 annually. Attempts to Include both pro posals In a deficiency appropria tions bill were defeated yester day on grounds that they were out of order in such a measure. ALL-OR-NOTHING WITH VIRGINIA COACH CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Frank Murray admired Yale's quarterback for taking a gamble against Virginia with 17 seconds to go, when he called a fourth down pass Instead of punting from tho Ell's 33-yard line. Vir ginia had time to launch two passes and attempt a long field iioal from the 42. but the Blue signal-caller did not want his team to finish an unbeaten sea son with a 6-8 tic. Coach Mur ray of the Cavaliers is also an all-or-nothing man. To The Parents Art Evorlaiting Xmat Gift is a Business Course for your son Or daughter. W offer a Complete Business Course, and we Do teach that Snappy Up-to-the-Minute Thomas Natural Shorthand and Speed Typing. Klamath Business College 733 Pine Strait , . Corntt of 8th Phone 4780 Grangea of Oregon hav accepted tho responsibility for rail ing th atata's tnllr rural quota of ntarly $13,000,000 in war bonds during the 6th War Loan driv. Thoy ar now competing for Ihoio pritoa which will bo awarded grangaa having the high at par capita avorago of war bond purchases and sales botwetn now and Decembor 31. To the winning grange, east of the Caa cadoi, will go a reglatered Aberdeon-Angua bull, upper left, donated to tho cause by the Pacific Coast Abordoen-Angua asso ciation. For grangea wost of the Caacadea, a registered Jersey bull of the type shown at the right la being olforod by the Oregon Jeraey Catllo club. Tho reglstored Duroc Jersey sow, lowor loft, from E. C. Snmmoni, stale chairman of the Orogon war finance commitlee. wilt be given as second prise east of the mountains. Pacific Wool Growori association la giving a registered Romney ram. lowor rlqht, as second prlie for western Oregon granges. On a bails ol tho current Oregon grango membership of ap proximately 25.000 tho quota assigned in this 6th War Loan drive will amount lo S500 per mombor which thoy must eithor buy or loll. This is tho first timo in Oregon's history that a quota for the state's farm people has boon set. UBC 666 Three Years of War Against Japan Pays Off in Know-How (Editor's Note: Euucno Rums, i who Kiivc Anu'rlcnns the first i eye witness report of Puui'l Hnr- iinr, lulls what we hiivo learned In tho succeeding three years of fiKlilinc the Jiiiionesc. Burns has seen action from the Solomons lo the Aloiitlmis and from Pearl Iliiruur to Ceylon,) By EUGENE BURNS SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 7 (P) It has taken us three years to get tin; "know-how" of fighting the Jnpiinese. They forced good fighting by air, sea and land upon us. In the three years, we have had defeats and victories that were too costly In blood but they arc saving your sons' lives as the war goes Into the fourth year. When I made the first eye witness trans-Pncific telephone call from Pearl Harbor lo tho United States, Sunday morning, December 7, 1041, while Jap nncso bombs still were explod ing and our battleflcct was burn- Major Joe Foss Speaks to Rotary Mnlor Joe Foss, stationed at the murine Barracks, was the principal speokor at the Tulelakc Rotary club Wednesday. Foss answered questions that Rotar inns put to him and the program was on the "questions and answer" order. Later Major Foss accompan ied a group on a hunting trip, two arrangements made by Scott Warren. Foss said he had fairly good luck, reluming home with several pheasants and a big goose. Purchaa Corner Fluhrer's bakery recently purchased the corner on 8th and Pine where tho old health unit was previ ously located. This property was formerly owned by Mrs. Ma rion ilnyks. WEATHER Wattnr iHFi Dertmbtr A. 11)44 Mnx. Mln. Preclp. Eugene .17 .I);! KlNinnth Palli 4tt 24 .00 Sue-rumen to , 01 .10 ,00 Norm nend ..ao no ,w Portland M M .3 Med ford 40 30 Tracr Wriio .V7 in .0 Rn Fnnclica . 62 .00 ScftltlO 31 40 .00 Oregon Partly cloudy today, tonight ana rnaay wun nsm rin nonnwem portion tonliht and northweit portion Friday. Little chanta In tamparaturt- Northern California Clear totlny. to nlrlit and rrlda.v. excent tncrcaalne rloiidlne.il north portion Friday: slightly cooler aiicrnoona aiong wis vuwt. Today On The Western Front By The Associated Praia Canadian lit Army Front In Holland and inside Ger many quiet. British 2nd Army: Front quiet nflcr Germans flooded 30-squnro mile area above NijnicKvn In Holland, U. S. 9th Army: Massed along Roer river. U. S. lit Army: Launched attack from Index toward Pier In Germany. U. S. 3rd Armyt Mopped up In Sarregucmlnes, drove against Snnrbruckcn. U. S. 7th Army: Advanced on Colmar toward French frcc" . , j French 1st Army: Edged northward through Vosgcs. Ing, we had yet lo fight a major . naval, ulr or amphibious war. 1 Hud the fleet stcumcd out of: Pearl Harbor, December 7, the result might well have been per manently disastrous. As measured by present-day standards, every man-of-war was wociuiiy inadequate. Uhlle visiting the U. S. fleet's flagship, before Pearl Harbor, Ihe commander-in-chief pointed out a small battery of 1.1 anti aircraft guns. "There, Burns, is the answer to the airplane," he said. 1 think tho ship had two such butteries of four barrels each. Today, three years later, that ship has perhaps more thBn 100 ipuch heavier anti-aircraft rifles. Our Asiatic fleet, which took on the full brunt of the Japanese navy after Pearl Harbor, was worse. Most of its ships' guns could not be elevated to fire at an Incoming plane. Our carrier tactics were not far behind our old ships. In bat tle problems before Pearl Har bor, the carriers usually were spotted a hundred miles behind the battlcline and some of their planes carried smoke tanks in the bomb bay. Tho purposo o tho carrier planes, an admiral explained, was mainly "to do the spotting, put down smoke screens, engage enemy spotters and perhaps harass the enemy," In November, 1042, our battle ships fired their main battery at an enemy surface force for the first time since tho Spanish American war, 189844 years before. Likewise, we had not fought 0 modern night action until Aug ust, 1042, when at Savo Island a small Japanese cruiser force al most wiped out our Guadalcanal screening forces. We lost four cruisers within minutes without inflicting any appreciable dam age to the Japanese. At our first amohiblous land ing at Guadalcanal, supply lines failed, our men were bombarded almost nightly, reinforcements and replacements did not como, air covcrngc was lacking. At Attn in the Aleutians our California-trained men were not equioped with the right Jap-killing tools and the right clothes. Casualties as a result were high. And yet, all these Pearl Har bor, Savo island, Attn, Guadal canal, Tarawa paid off because we learned that know-how of jungle fighting, carrier battles, night fighting. Because these men died in the oast three years from Pearl Harbor to Leyte we've learned the know-how. Succeeding vie tories will be cheaper. 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