TWO HERALD AHDKEW8
MAKERS SPEED
PLANNING FOR
AUTO OUTPUT
(Continued From Page One)
auto industry has been ibout 4,
000,000 cars.
v Individual Quotas
Individual manufacturers will
be assigned quotas, which Nelson
promised would be announced
well before July 1." Quotas
will be based approximately on
1941 production with allowances
made for smaller manufacturers.
Nelson said.
The first new cars will go to
"essential users." Nelson said
the office of price administra
tion had decided that rationing
of new cars would continue until
such users' needs had been met.
He said he personally felt that
car rationing could be ended by
January 1.
(Continued From Page One)
demand. Some United States
delegates- like the compromise
idea, but say that in view of com
mitments already made to Rus
sia at Yalta they can not press
it. Russia has been standing
firm on the Yalta formula which
provides that any one of the big
powers can "veto" a council de
cision to take action.
Last night a committee of
United States, Russian. British
and Chinese officials drafted a
statement in reply to small na
tion questions about this for
mula. This statement promises
that any nation, great or small,
may bring a dispute before the
security council and that the
council may discuss it, without
taking a vote. Thus the veto
could not be used to prevent the
airing of charges and counter
charges. Tokyo Tries Tc
Pacify Soviets
SAN FRANCISCO, May 23
(IP) A Tokyo broadcast declar
ed today there was "no reason"
for Russia to "engage in war
with Japan" and also said that
if Japan should - desire peace
with Britain and the United
States, her proposals possibly
would be made through the
USSR.
The broadcast, intended for
Japanese in American areas and
recorded by the federal com
munications commission, assert
ed that although "Britain and
America are doing all they can
to drag' Russia in, Russia needs
to reconstruct first of all and
there is no reason for her to
throw away this opportunity
by engaging inwar with Japan.
Italian Seamen On
Way To Homes
SPOKANE, May 25 tF) Sev
enty Italian seamen, including
40 interned at Spokane, today
were on their way from the Pa
cific northwest to Ellis island, en
route to their homes m Italy,
Traveling in four guarded rail
road coaches, the group was in
creased in size with additions at
Sandpoint, Ida., and Missoula,
Mont. The men were interned
after Pearl Harbor when their
ships were taken over by the
reaerai government
R. L. Bonham, Seattle, direc
tor there for the federal immi.
gration service, said all such
Italian nationals would be de
ported eventually whether they
wish to go home or not.
WEATHER
lay H
, Mix. Mill.
BUHM 67 48
Klamath Falls 56 32
Sacramento 73 43
North Bend 98 49
Portland 61 ftl
Heno . , ,, 64 21
San Francisco 81 M
Preeip,
. .00
.25
..00
v !oo
.00
.00
.00
91
SaatUe 62 50
-"2r -" w 4 Trace
Oregon: Partly cloudy today tonlcht
and Saturday. Scattered ihowers today
over north part little chanse In tem
pera hire.
Northern California Clear today, to
night and Saturday except partly cloudy
extreme northern portion with irattered
howera today. Little chanse In temper
ature. . . .
Trace
TcMphoM 5582
"Three Little h
Sisters" J
SATURDAY ONLY
"Henry Aid rich
Swings It"
SeCOND THRILL HIT
"RETURN OF THE RANGERS"
Friday. Mir H4
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Pas One)
suicide complex still dominates
Jap strategy.
WE must guard against our
normal tendency to laugh
off these mutterings by the Jap
radio to the effect that the "mi
kado's government" (a new term
they've invented In the past few
davs) is prepared to wage sui
cide warfare for 20 or 30 years.
That has been top Jap strategy
from the beginning to threaten
us with DECADE AFTER DEC
ADE of die-to-the-last-man-in-the-last-hole
warfare in the hope
that we will become so fed up
with the prospect of indefinite
vears-on-years of bloody Jap
killing that we will break down
and give them an easy peace.
. ninrwrni v I .... 4m
kill ALL the 70 million Japs
U T.... UnmM ielanlc it will
111 Hit- uoii iiviiis -
be quite a job. That is what we
will have to do if we fight the
Pacific war to the finish the
JAP WAY.
Experience in Europe, how
ever, has taught us that we'll
probably be able to SHORT-CUT
11.:. 1 :r. nf 7an.lrilliniT Th
U119 uuaincM J ""I' ....... -0 . - - - -
top-ring nszis tin many wa.ia
ideas about dying to the last man
: 41..:- AIm.ma and .it V. r "r i.
in men nijimc w...-.
doubts," but we were too quick
for tnem smasmng tneir pvwui
to make war before they had
time to noie .up in uicir iaoi
nesses.
THE Jap radio has a new pipe
dream today telling us we
harl hntter not drae Russia into
the Pacific war, as if we do we'll-
have no neutral left in Asia run
THE JAPS TO TALK PEACE
TO!
This Jap mind!
THERE are a few highlights
- in tbe European news.
At a big victory banquet in
the Kremlin, Stalin, a GEORG
IAN, proposes a toast to the
RUSSIANS, mat is a little liKe
a South Caralinian (say some 30
years ago) proposing a toast to
the YANKEES.
For whatever it may mean.
Stalin is reported to have been
in one of his best moods in years,
e e
THE French foreign affairs
- committee (something like
our senate foreign relations com
mittee) asks the Dc Gaulle gov.
ernment to FORCE Franco to
GIVE UP LAVAL, who is al
readv under sentence of death
in France. That at least tells us
where Laval is (there had been
rumors he had been turned over
to the French).
We and the British are report
ed to be URGING Franco to de
liver Laval. -but as expressing
the belief that the affair should
be settled between France and
Spain.
How would it be settled?
Bv a French INVASION OF
SPAIN, thus starting another
WiThere are MANY ticklish
questions, you see.
. -
AT Berchtesgaden, we capture
" a set of Hitler s notes in
which he sets forth the German
scheme of conquest.
It started with universal mili
tary training, to be followed by
CONDlllumwii ot tne Lrerman
mind, that to be followed by
seizure of the Rhineland and
erection of fortifications to make
Germany's western frontier safe,
and THEN, when the IRON WAS
HOT, getting room to fignt on py
nabbing Austria, Czechoslo
vakia and Poland.
' It was a fairly shrewd plan,
and up to a CERTAIN POINT it
worked out.
BUT
At this certain point Hitler's
plan ran head-on into a GREAT
HISTORIC TRUTH.
His head became SWELLED
WITH SUCCESS, and he TOOK
ON RUSSIA.
THAT has ' been the trouble
with ALL these world con
querors. At some certain point
thev become swollen with suc
cess and bite off more than they
can chew..
That is very fortunate indeed
for the beautiful human ideal
that we call democracy ana tne
rights of the individual man.
Otherwise, we should long
since have had one world, gov
erned by ONE DICTATOR.
FUNERAL
EAftLE JONATHAN MOHKET
Funeral services for the late Earle
Jonathan Moloney, who passed away In
thla city on Friday, May 18, 1943. were
held In Llnkvltle cemetery on Friday,
May 39, IMS, at 3 p. m. with the Rev.
Victor PhUlIm of the Fint Methodist
church of this city officiating. Commit
ment services and interment followed.
Arrangements were under the direction
of the Carl WhiUock Funeral home of
thla city.
ENDS
vl,,wl
"Wanted By
The Police"
I STRIKES
00T
YANK SHIPPING
(Continued From Page One)
positions more than a mile
south of Yonabaru on the cast
coast against stiff opposition,
while Japanese troop move
ments to the south indicated
the enemy was preparing to set
up a new aeiensivc line.
On the west coast, sixth di'
vision marines poured in
strength into Nana, the island
capital, on bridges built under
continuous artillery fire. In the
center ot tne line tne 77tu o
vision captured two small vil
lagcs near Shuri fortress and
the 86th repulsed two counter
attacks. The 27th was pulled out, of
this sector to begin the biggest
mop-up job of the Pacific. The
lull division started out shout
der to shoulder in a- steady
downpour to search over 500
square miles (or an estimated
1000 Japanese soldiers and to
round up pernaps laO.000 Oki
nawan civilians.
EFFORTS CONTINUED
TO SETTLE TUXES
SACRAMENTO. May 25 M
A joint conference committee
continued its efforts today to
reach a compromise between
the two legislative houses on ex
isting differences of opinion over
tne proposed reduction of the
retail sales tax an additional half
cent and other amendments to
the fourth tax b 11
The six man group failed to
come to an agreement yesterday
Dut Assemblyman Walter J.
Fourt, author of the bill, said it
made some progress and sr
ranged to continue the attemDt.
Advised by the finance de
partment that ud to 10 davs time
would be saved through use of
tne assembly budget bill, the
senate finance committee re
versed a previous decision and
announced the lower house bill
by Assemblyman Albert Wollen
berg will be reported to the sen
ate instead of the companion
measure which was introduced
in the upper house.
White Collar Workers
Keep Aluminum '
Potlines Functioning
VANCOUVER, Wash., May 25
(VP) Managerial and other white
collar workers kept two potlines
of the Aluminum Company of
America plant functioning today
after three lines were closed by
what company and union offi
cials said was a "wildcat" sit
down strike.
ALCOA officials said the AFL
Aluminum Workers Union.
which comprises production
workers and includes about half
the 900 employes here, struck in
demand that a foreman be dis
missed. The AFL Aluminum Trades
Council, which represents all
unions in the Vancouver plant.
said the 7 crafts unions were re
maining on the job and termed
the sitdown unauthorized. Offi
cials of the production workers
could not be reached for com
ment. .
P1I1ETQEE
Phon 3282
Continuous Shows Daily
Box Offica Opens 12:30
SHE
. M- WANTED
M TO IOOK
II CLAMOROUS
II IN THE
II MIRROR OF
11 ANOTHER
MAN'S
EYES)
IB
v3 ZJ.ftfo
ISAJRMVATE
rati.
SECOND HIT
yo Sift
SWYGART GETS STAR
Marine Sgt. Philip W. Swy
gart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam C. Swygart of Malm, has
been awarded the Bronze Star
medal tor heroism in action on
Saipan last summer, the marine
corps announced today.
lie was decorated at the San
Diego, Calif., leatherneck base,
where he is stationed after mora
than two years service with the
second marine division.
When a Japanese artillery
shell severed one of our com
munications lines on Saipin,
Swvgart braved heavy enemy
fire to go forward and repair
the wire, the citation accom
panying the medal said.
He attended Malin high
school before enlisting.
SARGENT ON DESTROYER
ABOARD THE U. S. DE
STROY ER YARNALL IN THE
PACIFIC James Sargent, 27,
watertender, third class, whose
wife Mrs. Mary Sargent, lives at
uorrls, (Jam., is aooara tms
fighting destroyer which hung
up s record of one major opera
tion each month during her first
year of action against the Japa
nese in the Pacific.
La f fey Survives
Gruelling Two-Hour
Attack By Japanese
(Continued From Page One)
knocking out some of our guns
and starting fires in the 40 mm
magazine.
"Within 30 seconds two planes
hit the after deck house, sealing
several men to their deaths in
compartments below. Just then
a Corsair came chasing a Japa
nese right over the main mast.
The Jap took off half of the
yardarm, and the Corsair took
off the other half.
"The Jap crashed in the water.
The Corsair pulled out with a
wing damaged; shot down qpoth
er plane and then crashed. An
other ship rescued the pilot.
"Then a large plane carrying
a 500 or 1000 pound bomb came
from the starboard. Mount two
fiut a five-inch projectile square
y into it and the plane disinte
grated 200 yards from us.
Crashes Off Bow
"Another plane apparently hit
by the air patrol came by in a
mass of flame, and crashed off
the port- bow. The next Jap
plane knocked off the other
yardarm and crashed alongside.
"The last plane approached
from the starboard and dropped
a bomb amidships, killing sever
al men in the wardroom where
a doctor was treating the wound
ed. The air patrol shot that
plane down.
"Every man stayed on his bat
tle station. If one was killed a
radioman or pharmacists mate
would take his place. One boy,
Coxswain Calvin W. Cloer from
Burbank. Calif., in mount three
was seriously burned. He went
to the wardroom, saw the many
casualties needing treatment and
went back to his battle station.
Wounded again, he returned to
the wardroom for attention Just
as a bomb hit, killing him.'
tor awhile we thought we
were going to sink but a tug
pumped us out and saved us."
Ihi Europeans who first visit-
ed Australia, Polynesia, New
Zealand and America found the
natives had domesticated dogs.
..NEW..
ODAV
45S2fc
J
OINTAIED
MANE
UVERS BY
NATIONS EYED
(Continued from Page One)
miltee was asked yesterday to
fio.it pone a vote on an Austral
an amendment to the Dumbar-riuL-
nlnn. which would add
other types of armed forces to
the air strcngin coniempmion
for immediate use of the world
council.
Klamath basin people today
were again reminded of the
civilian opening of the USO set
for May 29, from 7:30 p. m. to
10:30 p. m.
The public is invited to look
over the new USO headquar
ters in the Arcade garage build
ing, 11th and Walnut, on this
occasion.
Entertainment features will
include the Marine Barracks
band, and presentations by in
dividuals and groups from the
Barracks, nival air station, and
Camp Tulclake.
The military opening is set
for June 1.
Carpenters are now putting
final touches on the USO quar
ters, said to be among the most
spacious and well-planned on
the Pacific coast.
Jap Ships Told
To Return Home
NEW YORK, May 25 T)
The Bern radio said today:
"It is reported that all Jap
anese ships at sea have received
the order to return to the Jap
anese bases as soon as possible.
This leads to the conclusion that
strong allied forces are ap
proaching . the Japanese main
land."
CBS recorded the Swiss
broadcast, which gave no source
for this information, but added:
This assumption was confirmed
by radio Tokyo, which declared
that an allied large scale attack
against the Japanese islands is
feared.
Mining Leaders Seek
Money From U. S.
WASHINGTON, May 25 (Pi
Mining industry representatives
were reported today to be plan
ning to seek government repay
ment for losses suffered due to
restriction of gold mining.
Rep. Engle (D-Callf.) predict
ed the move, declaring . in a
statement that the gold oper
ators "will make demands for
and undoubtedly receive reim
bursement." He said the action would suc
ceed because war production
board restrictions of gold min
ing "arc illegal."
Mat Dally Opan 1:301:49
Saturday Midnight
What Is This
Evil That
Shadows Their
Lives?
HOY LA MARR
GEORGE BRENT
PAUL LUKAS
"Experiment
Perilous"
N0W
JAMB CMIG V; 1 Yl
DONNA RED WSr.
oUIUOfil MAIM f j 'jf
Four-Power Plan
To Occupy Reich,
Austria Slated
WASHINGTON. May 25 (Tl
A joint four-power arrangement
to occupy Germany and Austria
may be announced soon by the
allies, It was learned today.
This would Include agreement
on the Joint control commissions
provided ror Benin ana vimim
at Yalta, it is understood here.
Because most of these arrange
ments are still primarily in mili
tary hands and have security
angles classified restricted, no
details could be disclosed now.
MEMBERS LISTED
(Continued from Page One) '
and Burma Lt. Col. Leopold
Stennetl Amery.
Secretary of state for the col
oniesFrederick George Stan
ley. War secretary Sir Hamcs
Grlgg.
Air secretary Harold Mac-
Millan.
Secretary of state for Scot
land Earl of Roscbery.
Minister of agriculture . and
fisheries R. S. Hudson.
German Subs
Sunk In Hunt
LONDON. May 25 (Pi Four
and possibly five German sub
marines were sunn in me clos
ing days of the war In what the
air ministry today called "the
greatest U-boat hunt" In the en
tire conflict.
Long-range Liberators of the
coastal command, flying from
Scotland, made the kills In a 24
hour period. All but one attack
was by daylight.
The surfaced undersea craft
resisted fiercely, the air ministry
said, tossing up flak In an at
tempt to ward off the depth
charges.
Ship Repair Yards
Seek More Men
SEATTLE. May 25 (
Pugct Sound shipyards needing
more than 0000 workers for
ship repair work alone have
been granted prospects 01 some
relief, State Manpower Director
A. F. Hardy announced today.
The west coast shin repair
Industry has been classified as
of number one urgency and se
lective service will grant
blanket deferrals to skilled ship
repair workers, he said. The
high priority has been reserved
previously . for secret govern
ment projects.
The grotesque modern bulldog
is a dwarfed, degenerate type
of the mastiff, bred solely to suit
the taste of fanciers,
vrzf.
. v
A Ridin Romancin' Rodeo Show)
j
SECOND
THRILL HIT
Hair-XiUhf DrtaMefalatV
(HDcfthrftOn
EDWARD NORMS
JOHN AtftOTT
JUNI STOUT
II
J
Shopping by Japanese from
tho Tult'lukr ('HA center was
uxnluinecl U tho retail trade
coitimlttco ot the chuiuber of
coninivrro tuduy by lluy Best, dl
rector ul 1 10 lillclako editor.
Ilo said that evacuees who
have been cleared by the army
lor release from the center find
It necessary to iliop In Klumutli
rails In order to obtain clothing
tiud oilier rssrntlala before leav
ing tho project.
Tho chamber committee decid
ed to put the facts In letter to
merchants, giving them full In
formation and anklng any mer
chant, not desiring JiipanoM
trade, to notify the chamber.
The chamber will pass the Infor.
mllon on to the WRA center,
and the evacuees will be told of
the policy and, advised to trade
elsewhere. Purpose is to avoid
embarrassing situations.
New Housing
Shortage Hits
Klamath Falls
A heavy Influx of navy people
has created new shortages in the
housing situation hore, Manager
Charles Slark of the chamber of
commerce reported today.
Stark said thai the chamber
Is visited dally by large num
bers of people looking for rental
quarters, and urged that agents
and landlords list all vacant
property with the chamber.
New arrivals at tho Klamath
navul air station have created
Increased housing . demand, he
said.
Gas, Microscope
Stolen From Station
Slate police today reported
tho theft u( 25 gallon of gaso
line, a microscope, and a soil
tester from the Oregon State col
lege experiment station located
three miles south of Klamath
Falls on Washburn way,
Prowlers entered the station
some time Thursday night, ac
cording to Alvln Eugene Gross,
manager of the station, who dts-;
covered the burglary when h
opened the office this morning.
The gatollne was siphoned out of
equipment at the station, police
said.
Himmler's Hoard Of
Money Discovered
BERCHTESGADEN. Ger
many, May 25 (P) Helnrlch
Hlmmler's hoard of papor
money, worth possibly more
than 11,000,000, la In the hands
of the U. S. 10th airborne divis
ion. A German SS officer who
surrendered two weeks ago led
division officers to the' hoard,
containing currency of 28 na
tions, under a barn near here,
lt Is now being catalogued,
If It's a "frozen" article you
need, advertise for a used on
in tht classified.
QI:illl.jiiA)
Box Offlc Opans 1:45
- STARTS -
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economic field t.
their rtMiirn...!!1 chir... !
my.- -'Hi
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WASlHKnrn.. '
A congressional ?!y 111
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nlng. drastic curunlSf
uuoiruii auuni- wkUk "a
mamifaclurcr, l0 ft f
upply. or less. ,Ulli!
W fear. cffMiPM
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users-bnken, candy in W
the llke-ln' Z i.lS
meats. ' w
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sometime,, PKc Mc J"
hom.eO (loy
.IdeJaure''fe
Belgium and wV
receiver I a letter frmfe
Oliver V. SumciUn olffi
army air corp. that W
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were being returnM ? 5
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