AGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM EPLSY Mimr Manasina Editor CnUrtd aaconil clau mattar it tha poatolllca ol Klamath On AUJUII rfv, law. uum w - ' Hutu a. lan rain. o., Ry carrltr Rj carrier SUBSCRIPTION RATES: monin 75c By mail jr V SO By mail e month, wis aar US 00 Ouulda Klamath. La. Nodoc, Juklyou counllci aat 7,0B A temporary combination ot tha Kvenlns Herald and tha Klamath Nawa. PuDluhed ovary aftarnoon axcapt Sunday at Eaplanada and Plna alrcati. Klamath rail,. Orafon. by tha Karald Publiihlnf Co. and tha Nana PublUUlns Company. Mambar. Aaaoclattd Prca Member Audit Bureau Circulation Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY T is an annual custom for the editorial staff IT i! I of local stories of the year, and to run the list along with a 12-months news review m the last The prc- EPLEY edition in December. 1944 "big ten" will be tented Saturday. This is always an interest ing job for the news workers, whose lives are pretty well bound up with local news de 'velopmcnts and who enjoy reminiscing about them. We .hope the year-end news re views are equally interesting to readers. Space conditions this year will not permit the day-by-day news accounts for the whole year such as have appeared in the past. However, we have ar ranged a news panorama for each month that ; pretty well fills the bill, along with pictures that are essential to newspaper coverage in this area. a Local and -Outside News IN these days of newsprint shortage, there is steady competition for space between local and "telegraph" news. In our editorial office, we speculate a great deal as to which type of news commands the most interest among our readers, and therefore deserves the "breaks" in space and display. Every reader, of course, has his individual opinion on this same question, and we have to judge, as best we can, what will be most satisfactory to the majority. The amount of space devoted to local news in a newspaper depends to a considerable eNtent upon the city and the surrounding area which it covers. This writer, in more than a dozen years of newspaper work in Klamath Falls, has been impressed with the news productivity of the Klamath country, and local news is always worthy of substantial space here even in the midst of the world-shaking events that clamor for space nowadays. We have also been impressed, in the past year, with the interest shown in local events by the newcomers in this community. Even the mil itary and construction people, who are hero only temporarily, have demonstrated their in terest in what is going on in this locality. The steady rise in circulation of The Herald and News in the last three years is surely indicative of the interest of newcomers in the news of the Klamath country. a . Condensation AS for national and world news the matter that comes into our office over the tele type machines it is necessary, on a paper of .this size, to do a condensation job that is not attempted on metropolitan dailies. Many read ers appear to like their news dished up to them , in this fashion, and condensation, which begins as a necessity, is usually found to be worth con tinuing after the space problem passes. The newsprint shortage it seems to be on our mind this morning has also brought about a previously unattempted condensation of local news. We have found that it requires more careful work to do this job effectively to tell the whole story in fewer words but here again, we think the reader is pleased if we succeed. Wordiness, whether oral or written, gets to be a pain in the neck. And that sounds like a good reason to bring this shop talk to a close. a Fuel end Our Installations IN the Eugene newspaper the other day, Eugene lumbermen attempted to explain the reason why several hundred cords of fuel wood were shipped from Eugene to Klamath Falls, a big lumbering center, and in this connection men ' tioned the use of fuel by the Klamath Falls Marine Barracks. We were interested in the failure of the Eu gene observers to mention the Klamath naval Air station. It appears that the Barracks, being a unique institution and one whoso activities are not so much surrounded by military secrecy, is getting the lion's share of publicity about our local military installations. Well, the Eugene lumbermen were wrong, anyway. Tha Marine Barracks does not uie wood for fuel. It uses coal. The Klamath naval air station enters the fuel wood situation be cause it uses hogged fuel. Both installations have brought a larger popu lation to Klamath Falls, which is one reason for the local fuel wood problem. But the Marine Barracks proper is not "using a largo amount of wood," as the Eugene paper said. News Behind the News By PAUL MALLON Washington; Dec. 29 (Part iid The impending eve of a new year calls for estimates of what it will bring. It is the custom, in the glow of the holiday, to cast the best possible light on the future. The supposition is that, true or not, such light mukcj everyone feel better. But optimism these days comes very near to being nonsense. Only a fool would assume for himself the pose of prophecy. Yet there arc certain matters which are expected by authorities who know most about the subjects involved, and a clear understanding of these expectations is necessary to intelligent planning, and reading of the news. The coming year certainly will bring peace in Europe, or at least an end of the war, which will be called peace. No one can foretell what the nature of the peace will be. It is likely to become a mnkcshill anangemcnt evolving from events, a continuance ot the temporizing, com promising tactics evident in Italy, France, Greece, the Balkans. Political turbulence therefore is to be expected in those countries. A settled situation will be long coming. Three Years More? 10 one expects full victory in the Pacific this year, although it could possibly come from aircct invasion and conquest of Japan. This, however, would not assure peace in Asia and the restoration of a settled condition there is cer tainly a matter of years. The general assumption here is that the Pa cific war will last one to three years longer. Inflation or deflation? Prices certainly will continue to edge themselves upward, possibly throughout the year. The pressure for increased prices is based on the shortage of goods, and there seems no possibility of relaxation of that pressure within the next twelve months. The government will do all it can, and to a considerable extent should be able to avoid the effects of price rises, but it cannot dispel the pressure effectively with any step short of a release of abundance, and that is a matter for 1946 or later. Therefore, we must have more inflation. a a Sayings Will Help FURTHERMORE, specific unemployment should be temporary a month or two at most and the economic effects of it should be fully offset by the great amount of savings ac cumulated by the people, their bond holdings which can be cashed, the relief for demobilized soldiers, etc. Delays will be encountered in reconversion, but the business will go to the swift, so the nat ural controlling pressure will work for swift jobs, high wages and therefore, high prices. The deflationary aspects of the change from top war effort will hit particularly the lower grade workers who have been enjoying a bonanza from the shortage of man power. They should merely return part way back to normal wages, hours and work, no further. The prospects for the year as a 'whole there fore, favor a restricted further inflationary run, increased uncertainty in world politics, gradual settling of the peace plans to a basis of stark reality (this may shock us because we have be lieved so long our own necessary war propa ganda) and more difficult troubles at home, which can be managed with proper, realistic considerations. a Deflation? THE business seers have changed their tunc lately. They are now again expecting de flation as soon as the war in Europe is over. I cannot see it. They are reasoning that consumption will fall off on V-E Day, widespread unemployment will develop, cash will become tighter, prices will fall. I think they are premature by at least a year and probably two or three. Only the restoration of normal peacetime supplies can bring de flation. A difficult labor situation unquestionably is to be expected upon the end in Europe. A heavy wave of strikes is not at all Improbable. Union leaders will find it difficult to handle their men in the face of rising prices. The government may offset this with leader ship for a new general wage Increase. If it docs the effect will be further inflationary and thus also work toward the opposite of what the prevailing deflationist economists are expecting. Youth Charged With Robbery, Forgery ' PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 29 tfP) Postal authorities and the dis trict attorney are investigating charges that a 16-ycar-old youth, held in the city jail, has robbed Vanport city mail boxes of bank statements, leading to forgery of S2850 in checks. Police said the boy has been using the statements for the last four months to copy signatures from cancelled checks, using false social security cards for identification. Vancouver Man Faces Charge of Murder VANCOUVER, Wash., Dec. 29 m) Arthur E. Miller, 53, faced a second degree murder charge today in the fatal shoot ing of William J, Moss, 33, Longvlcw. Moss was shot early Tuesday as he sat in an automobile out side Miller's home near Wash ougal. Sheriff Robert Brady quoted Miller as saying that Moss threatened to enter the house in search of a woman acquaintance. Coal Movements to Northwest Increased WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 fP) During the week ended Decem ber 16, 52,335 tons of coal were moved to the Washington-Ore-gon area, an Increase of 4095 Ions over the previous week. SIDE GLANCES core iw iv mi twice, me T. u no. u a pat. yr ft-iy , "(iee whiz' cnn'l llic fart thai it foils on n Sunday night uc nn excuse in nisi sniy iipmc? From ' the file 40 years 090 and 10 'yer$ ( oso, From the Klamath Republican December 29, 1904 About 75,000 acres of land have been signed up for the gov ernment irrigation program. Klamath complainants against poor mail service wero told today that the stage company, operat ing between here and Pokegama, must be to blame. Manager Richardson of the Klamath Luke Railroad, running between Thrall and Pokegama, said his firm had delivered the mall promptly at Pokegama. From tha Klamath News December 29, 1934 . Mrs. Emma Hammond, 90, pioneer Klamath resident, died Thursday morning at the home of her son, E. M. Hammond of Merrill. a a a Editorial note: The Knox state liquor law. after one year of trial, has obviously won public approval. A few changes may be advisable, but in general the Oregon system of state control is working out for the public good. 4 PER CENT IE D SET D RECTORS BEHIND NAZI LliS LONDON. Dec. 29 tP) Fif teen hundred U. S. bombers and fighters from Britain, a great fleet of RAF heavy bombers and limited numbers of continent-based planes rained thou sands of tons of bombs today between the western front and the Rhine. It was the seventh straight day of long-range attack by heavy bombers of the U. S. eighth air force and the RAF from Britain, and their assaults were suplc mented by strikes from Italy carried out by the U. S. 13th air force. A half dozen road and rail Junctions and bridges in the Eus-kirchen-Trier sector were ham mered by part of tho U. S. bomb er fleet. Others aimed their ex plosives and incendiaries on rail traffic in the Bingcn-Frankfurt-Aschaffcnbure triangle. The bombers were escorted by 700 Mustang and Thunderbolt fighters, but no enemy planes were sighted, a headquarters spokesman said. The battlefield bombing was through clouds. Other targets were hit visually. A four per cent dividend was declared on all slock and the dividend amounted to better than S10.000 nt a directors meeting- of the Klamath Production Credit association held Thursday at the Klamath offices. Another $10,000 was set up in the guarantee fund or reserve as protection to the farmers' Invest ment in the stocks, while $35,000 of cIbh A stock held by the Pro duction Credit corporation of Spokane, Wash., was retired. This corporation at one time owned $250,000 worth of class A stock and this retirement re duces its investment to $82,650. The board of directors and of ficers attending the meeting were: William Klltridge, presi dent; E. M. Hammond, vice pres ident: A. R. Campbell. E. A. Geary and Lee Holllday, direct ors, and Lee McMullen, sccre tary-treasurer. Arrangements were also made for the annual - stockholders meet nit which will be held Jan nary 2u at the Wlllard hotel. The attendance is expected to exceed 300 persons and all stockholders are urged to attend. The Klamath Production Credit association was organized in 1934 and since that time has made $22,367,478 In loans to farmers and stockmen in Klanv ath and Lake counties in Oregon and in the northern portion of Siskiyou and Modoc counties In northern California. During the 11-year period, members have increased ineir owncrsnip 01 as sociation stock to $141,620. A local farmer-controlled coopera tive, the association's goal also is 100 per cent local farmer-ownership. Tin Can Collections Increase In Year PORTLAND, Dee. 29 (TO Tin cm collections In Oregon are up 18 per cent this year over 1943, Claude I. Sersanous, state drive chairman, said today. He set Oregon's 1045 quota at 161 per cent higher than this year's mark. Classified Ads Bring Results. PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN . NO HOSPITALIZATION No Loia of Tlma rarmaoant Kaaultal DR. E. M. MARSHA Chlropraetlo physician tt Na. lib Kuan Ire Theatre Bids Pbene 16M Juit Rtct.Ydl Clear Beaver STETSON HATS Slits DREW'S MANSTORE 733 Main DANCE Saturday Night K.C. HALL Sponsored by Towniend Club Modern and Old Tim Dancing 9:00 'Til 1:00 Men J0e Ladies SOc EAGLES ATTENTION! 2 More Big Parties! -SPECIAL MEETING Friday, Dec. 29, 1944 James W. Bryan, Jr., Grand Trustee, will make his official visit. Big class refreshments! -Annual New Year's Dance Dec 30, 1944 -- At the Armory Dacembor 2? Klamath Church Directory Chare ef Cbrlt (Uowniown) All mimNn and frlenda are) ex land -d epeclal ittf cordial Invitation to Hand lha downtown Church ol Chrlat at Sunday murnlna eervU-ea. Song eerv Ira. 10 . m.t Dltfla etudv IV;le a. nt.. earmon and worth! p. II a, m.i commun ion, 11:43 a. m.i availing errvleee, 7. 30 o'clock. Located In tha KO hall oval lha Rainbow theatia, a Medea ratal llaallil undajr erhotd 10 a. m.i worship aarv Cemmuiilly Nuilia lea, tliU a, m( fir Cavanani tUi Walnut. Phona 831 T. A I hart U Dwuht, pastor. Sunday luhonl, 10 a. m.i moinlna wurahlp, 11 a. m.i Young pao pita meeting. 7 p. m.i aanlitg larvUe t:4S p. m. Mhl-waa (allowahlp, Wod naadajr. T.43 p. m. rirtl rraibylarlaa Church N. ih and Plna. Mav. David f. Har nett. Jr., pastor. US N, Blh. Cliurt fi tela phona 74 U. ttlbla achool at 9:4a a. in.. worship at 11 a. in. Thraa ChrUttan En deavor groupa at 9:90 p, m, Klamath Revival Center 1033 Mitchell at fthaata way. Rav. Warrea D. Combe, paitor. RUnUay achool. 10 a m. Mnrntng aarv Ira. 1 a. m. Evangelistic, 7:30 it m. Week night aarvlres. T:30 p m. Wednesday and rriday Choir practice Thuraday, 5 p. m. Phona 4AW, a arret Heart eighth and High etraeta. Runday Moisasl T, o, :30 and 11 a. m Holy Day Maaaea: , and 8 30 a. m. Weekday Maui a. m. Confeealnne: Raturdaye. Kvaa of llolv daya and flret Prldaya from 9 to 4 p. in and from 7:30 to 30 p- m. Tha ftelvallen Army Fourth and Klamath. Company meal ing 10 a. m. H nil new mealing II a m Kvaniellftlr meeting R p. nt. Thursday and Raturday p m- Oftirere In charge Major and Mrs W. It o well. Klamath tatharan Croat and Craarent R M, Topneu paalor. fleatdence UTS Craarent, phone 1439. Runday school al 8 44 a. m Divine worth, p at II a nv fVnlor choir rahearaal Wednaaday at 7.30 p. m. Ptrat Praaby tar Ian. Mtrrtll Morning sarvlre, 11 o'clock. David J Ferguson, minuter. tatter. Day taints Tha Church of Jeam ChrUt of Latter Day Ralnta hold their aervtcae In trie auditorium of tha city library, Blh and Klamath. Prleithood mealing ttundav morning at 13 Id. Kundny achool coin menree at OM Racramenl mealing at (I n clock Sunday evening K, K Har row, branch preeident. phona B2D3 or 6731. a rilfrln flallnaaa Rev. William tngvranll. paitor. SV Wanttand Runday echonl. 43 a m . morning earvtra. II oclock. fHYPJI 43 p. m.i evangelistic aarvlca, 7.4J t ov w e a Klamath Tarn ale 1007 Pin. Daniel B. Andenon. paitor Runday at'hool o 43 a. m Morning wor ship 11 a m Overcomere earvtre o 30 p. m Jell maetlng 3 p nv Hadlo pro gram KPJI Rahirttay 0 30 p m Cvao gellstlo eervlce 73 p. m-j Wednesday nlghL prayer meelin k rirel Itapltil N th at Washington- Rav Cecil C Brown pastor Realdenca. 27 Eldorado Phon 7430 Bible achool 0 43 a m Morning worth I p. 11 o'clock- Raptlat training union. 0 la p m. Evening eer vie. 7 30 o'clock. Wld-wah pravar. Wednesday. 7:30 p. m. Choir rahearaal. Wednaaday. S 30 p. m- President Lauds Oregon Council PORTLAND. Dec. 20 (A' Dr. Howard R. DrlKK. prentricnt of the American Pioneer Trails association, lauded tho Oregon council today, giving opce'" pralto to the Old On-Kon Trail marking project carried out by school children in September. "The work the Oregon council has dona to conserve Oregon's historical resources has set tho pace (or all the states," he de clared. Teaching children "the mean ing of America" is the associa tion's contribution to tho war, he said. Dr. Drlggs is attending the council's annual meeting here tonight. If It's a "frozen" article vou need, advertise for a used one In the classified. Friendly Helpfulness To Every Creed and Purs Word's Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite M, Ward and Som AMBULANCE SERVICE 25 High Phon 3334 Church t lha Nasereaa Oanlan and Martin. Sunday achool, ;40 a m.i worship, II a. m ; depart mental meetings. 4fti Kvangellallo, 7:4.1 p. m. mid-week pravar, Wedneailey 7; 43 Cm. I'aitur, Hat 1 1 and l Palereull. OJU larlln. uliutie 4UJ0. a a Aeseeably at dad Rev- A. Harold Parsing, paslnr, 74o Oak. Runday school. 43 a. m.j sermon II a m,l Young people. JO p. m Rvan. allslo meeting, 7:30 p. in. Tueailay 7.30 p. nt.. prayer meeting, Thursday 1;0U p. nt.. preaching. a a Union ft nap at Ml Mian Located at an I Commercial, Hitler i'.V0!" MI Tlmma. tailnr. Residence, ai7 Klamath, Muiulav artiool. 10 a. in , meachlng, II a m. Ill hi a class, 0 p. in Mrs A, Martinet, teacher. Kvenliig service, T-aii it, m . songs. Prayer meet ing. Wednaaday. L3t u. m. a t Hlhle Replls! Wiartl at Idetla'e rorner. Kailh I1 fields, pastor, Worahlp. II a. in. Itlhle training echool, U43 a. ni. Evening eaivlfo, 7 4.1 p, m. Wednaaday praei aaavlca. 7. 43 p in. a e I. real's RgUcepal rharth Itav. r. C WUaeubach. rector. Cornel Jefferenn and ath. Runday eervii-ea. Holy communion, i.ou a. in. Cmi it'h sthonl, IMS a. in. Fiibi Riiiuley ol each month Holy communion at U OO a in. and all oilier Runriaya moinlng prayer and sermon at Uion h m. Ihtly Days and Heinle Uaya, Huly Communion. 10 oo a nt a Apealello Pa I In N Nth ft 1 1 nil ay achool. 0 30 a ni Morning devotion, II a in. fcveugnllilir service, l.ii p. U. Wednesday and rrl day. 8 p. m. , Cemaivnlly Ceagreieilenel liar dan between Kasl Main and Martin Churvh school IMA a m , aervlre, II a. m . Cnmradae of tha Way. A p in . community hall. Service every Hun day. a . a Zi tatharaa 1033 High. Victor A. Nchtilie. pastor Phona STu.t. Divine worship. U a m , Sunday achool. II 41 a in Choir. Thure j day. H p. m. Children'! confirmation ; clasa. 0.30 to II W a m. at tha parsonage a a rirtl Charrh at C hrist Pclentlsl loth and Washington Hnmlev mnrttltt aarvlca, II o'clock, Munday srliiMd. 0 3n a m. Testimonial rnaatlnga Wednesday : at fl p m. Cre Chrlatian hcienca read tng room located at ion Main. I a a a Chared at rrotraailve rayrhle ! IMvlna llaatlng ( place of meeting changed from H9 i r. Main la 333 Main. Mount 7 Sunday ' arrvU'e. hp m . Irt-tiira by Hv. Kath leen Krlf. Wediteaday. 7 p. m , circle, t.lhrerv oprn fur Ipndlna e ttk: Tailor's realtlenc. 7u MMcttall, phone j 7372. All are welcome. a a a I Chart af C brlil 3303 Wantland. Ministars, Raynmnd I. GibbJ. l-3 rrnt. phona 4n,wt and M Uoyd 8nillh. 3337 A I la mot 1 1 drive, phona 3i33 lllhle study 10 a m . ifrmun and cnntmunlon. II a m to IK : nmm. Kvenlng earvtcea, 7:43 o'clock.) Ijidlea Hlhla claaa. Thursday. 3 O m rrhlav itibla etuiiy 7 30 p. m. A hearty Invitation to all. ' I Ml. I -ail treabaterlaa Rav Hugh T Mltchaimora. paator Worahlp. P43 a. m. Hilda school. 10 a. m ChrUttan Cndaavnr. 7 30 p, m Coma out to any of them aarvlca. I a a Church -f 0.4 1307 Division. Ttev. M M Bigger, pas. , tor, Church school, 10 a m Prach tng sarlce II a. m Vtn. 6 30 p. m. preaching servlrt, 743 m. free Malha4lsl 43fl South Ninth Rav. Nnrrla It ! Hughaa, pastor Sunday school at lu a nt Ilomar Munael. iupr in tangent 1 Morning servlca at II a m Happy hout and YPMS al 7 p n. Kvangnllst aarvlca at 7,43 p m Thuraday evening at 7.43 nrayer meeting. I riral M-ss..-,-. h Wmahip it , m nuiMiav school, U a 1 lllbla 'ho,.l. p:M . ., 'WW hi.' ,. n iv .v.,,.ll.l, a.rvlr. ? S.v.nih.li,, Ai..i', ' Altln..m .i...k, .i . '"'.V I'r.yar maallna w.rt;.J' . nvl ..... tv . . na.mr iiwj ,i,i...,i. ,,h - ) n,l Immanutl n,pll.t inn aim in, , a.v J. T ..'IiiiiiI a in v, p.n hl7-! Allamsnl rr.alt.i,,,.. Jiiiimr Ulan ai'hmil, a ,h ... . aid lha man.,, I.I.UICB al Chun rail r...i. I ('h,n, ' ix. Nl,r.?,','Li.. .u(, H...I..I... ""'y, 1 1 i -rvlrra. WedoaartaT J.'S "'"ll 7 43 p nt lutuNi.v v;:."".1"! nraUa at 7 48 " i First Church of Christ, Scientist ktanrh l lha M.lb., r,L n I '"" h,''l.:L,n.''"".l;l loth ami Waiblnitsi rrkss Ran4ar Rrtiaal a ia a. m autidar flair !- It a. m. ' Habitrt, Il.r. It. "rhrlsila. aM. IVatt4av avanlug itrvlra h , Ma-illBf U..m. 0;, M,(J THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SCIENCE nnd HEALTH With Key lo the Salpturti by Mary Baker Eddy may bo read or purehaiti.1 ut the Chriilion Science Reading Roomi 1023 Main SI. jf mm mm The Second Coming of 1 Christ and the Judgment The oreet Judgmonl will Inke place whn Chrlit cemn the locond ilme. There will be no lime loll (or t thouiind yeer reign on thli earth lome claim, Jciut laid, "Bui when the Son ol man ihall come in Hii glory, and ill the angela with Him, then thai) He ill on lha throne of Hl gloryi end before Him shall be gathered all the natleoi: and He ihall aeparate Ihom one from another, at the ahee- herd aeparalelh the iheep from the goatii and He Mail hi the aheep on Hli right hand, but the goati on ina mi, (Matt. 25: 31-33). I1AYMOND I. GIBBS, Evangallil CHURCH OF CHRIST 2205 Wantland At.. Klamath Falli. Oregon. hh and full flavored-o wonderful treat became they are Sablnlt'fd Iht. remarkable new method that meant better,' freiher potato chlpi-et leading arocert. Aik for Hue Bell when you wont fhot grgnd potato flovorr' Potato Chips