Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 05, 1945, Image 4

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    FOUR HERALD AND HEWS
Tuajidty, Jun S. 1943
rANK JKNK1N1 MALCOLM EPLTT
Mltor UuUn lllor ..
A kmpom oomblMUoa of the Evowna Harold
bSim Published even afternoon wc.pl Sund.j
In.d. .nd Pin. ima, Klam.th rails Or.,on. B
U.rJdd PubTutum Co uid lb. Netra Publlshlm Company,
f eoonUi SSIS
w toon
eUBSCBIPTlON ItATESl
Bj comer "" 'so B nail
. ... HU R mall -
Outside Klamath. Uka. Modoo. SUklrou counUoo -J ear 00
Enterod oo oeeood o,s mstter .1 lb. po.it.K c of "
rails. Oro. on Auiuat 30. IBM under Ml ol consraos.
tuna . lit!
Member,
taoeUM Proa
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
THE soldiers who are here with the "Here's
Your Infantry" show want the public to
see their demonstration.
They are particularly anxious that it be
viewed by that portion ot the public which is
nnathetic about the war ana . wi
the Seventh War Loan.
They believe their show will
sell bonds, not simply on the
basis of bond purchases for
admission to the event, but
through the psychological ef
fect it has on observers.
Its two striking phases
preparation for battle, and an
attack on a Jap pillbox draw
the spectator into the battle.
Thev have the effect of iden
tifying him with the men who EPLEY
carry on bitter combat in his behalf.
The result of all that is to make him a strong
supporter of the war effort, and therefore a
bond buyer.
The question today, on the eve of the show,
Is whether the apathetic who need this lesson
will be there to see the show.
We have an idea a great many of them will
be on hand, and we predict that the effect
will be just what is promised by the infantry
men who want to sell the war effort and war
bonds to civilians.
We suggest that every reader expose himself
to this experience. The men who put on the
show deserve a chance to convince.
e e
Elect-ion Month
IT is time for all of us to realize this Is an
important election month.
In Klamath county, five elections will be
held in June. They include:
June 18 City elementary school district elec
tion, county unit school district election.
June 22 State special election, city special
election.
June 25 Klamath Union high school district
election.
A number of important issues of a financial
nature are up for determination at these
elections, and several school district directors
will be chosen.
We suspect that even many conscientious
citizens have let this situation creep up on
them without much thought for the decisions to
be made. From here on out, we will try to
take care of several reminders in the form of
discussion and informative articles.
e e o
Nightmarish
HERE'S a nightmarish thought for the WRA:
Suppose the Japs do succeed in sending
crew-carrying balloons over the ocean, and
these crews begin parachuting to earth on the.
west coast. What will that do to the present
policy of permitting Japanese-Americans to
return to their west coast homes?
During the exclusion period, any Japanese
found on the west coast was suspect. It
would have been almost impossible for a spy,
saboteur, plane or balloon crew member of
Japanese blood to get around without being
singled out.
But now, with many Japanese-Americans per
mitted to go at will in the coast area, a Jap
foe could get away with posing as something
else, or might not be questioned.
If the Jap balloon menace, which now seems
fantastic, develops into something real, it would
certainly make the exclusion revocation pre
mature. What if the WRA had to start evacuation all
over again?
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, June 5-Great as the bomb
damage to Japan is, it is nothing to what
is coming.
Our definite plans call for dropping two-and-
one-half times the bomb tonnage upon Japan
In the next year that we dropped ou Germany
the last year of the European war. We have
hardly begun.
The damages wrought already, have been
widely destructive only in Tokyo. The capital
has had a full dose. But at Yokohama and
through the other major cities, we have worked
upon certain industrial targets, rather than the
cities as a whole, and the results aro nowhere
yet comparable to what we did in Germany.
The question asked everywhere is whether
we can reasonably hope to bring peace in the
Pacific from this air attack, or whether we will
have to continue the slow process of fighting
for' more and more footholds from which to
drive a land invasion to a successful conclusion,
as in Germany.
Frankly, there Is no solid evidence upon
which to hang hopes for surrender from
bombing.
oooe
Wotch Business Class
THERE seems to be Just one slim chance that
we might get it. The Japanese business
class is nowhere near as firmly under the
thumb of the military as were the industrialists
of Germany. Hitler had his producers and all
people completely under control.
Japanese business leaders may see what hap
pened to all industrial plant structures in
Germany, contemplate the two-and-a-half times
as much weight, wnicn iney are going tu nui,
overthrow their government and surrender con
riitinnaiiv while thev have a few plants left
To date there have been no feelers from
them. No Japanese development (particularly
not these cabinet changes) warrants any aeinv
ite exDectation.
As far as the cabinet is concerned, the Jap
military people are merely handing portfolios
around to bolster public commence in a losing
leadership, without the slightest diminution
of their administrative power.
e e i
Phychological Beating
PSYCHOLOGICALLY, the Japs are taking
their air beatings about the same way the
Germans did. As long as the attacks were
scattered and therefore not apparent to the
whole country, they said very little about them.
But when Tokyo was largely destroyed they
opened their radios and told practically the
whole story.
The nazis decided similarly that people react
angrily to bombings, and in major instances,
which are impossible to conceal from the coun
try anyway, it is just as well to tell the people
and get some advantage from their generated
wrath.
No nation to date has been bombed into
surrender. First attacks of this new military
nature in Spain were accounted of secondary
importance. The Germans magnified the scope
a hundred times, finally with rockets. But
failed, in Britain.
Some of our air enthusiasts thought we could
bring the nazis to their knees that way and
publicly promised such a result if they could
get enough planes. They got twice as many
planes as they originally said they needed, and
more, yet a severe land invasion had to be
pushed to the final possible niche before sur
render came.
SIDE GLANCES
& Sou
Cat Tractor
Commonwealth..-
Curtls-Wrlatit
General Electric
General Motor
Gl Nor Ry pfd
Illinois central u.
Int Harvester
Kennecolt -. .
Lockheed ...
Lons-Bell "A" Z
Montgomery Ward
Naih-Kelv
N V Central
Northern Pacific ,
Pac Gas & El .
Packard Motor
Penna R R
Republic Steel
Richfield Oil
Safeway Storei -
Scara Roebuck
Southern Pacific
Standard Brands
Sunshine Mining , ,
Trans-America ..
Union OH Calif ., , ,
Union Pacific
u s steel .
Reasons For Defeat
BUT Field Marshal Von Rundstedt, inter
viewed after his defeat, attributed it to
factors largely caused by our air attack. He
mentioned these factors in the order of im
portance he ascribed to them:
1 Lack of fuel, both oil and gasoline to
operate the tanks and planes; 2 Destruction of
the railway system (the greatest accomplish
ment of our air force); 3 Germany's loss of
raw material areas such as Romania, and 4
Smashing of the home industrial sections such
as Silesia and Saxony by air attacks.
Three of these four Influences were the sole
results of bombings. Air enthusiasts could
rightly claim that their work was indispensible
to the defeat of Germany, if not the major
cause.
With our navy cutting off shipping from the
relatively small Japanese island mainland and
our bombers doing more than twice as much
damage to it, as was done in Germany, results
will be certainly swifter and perhaps more de
cisive in the Pacific.
Yet, note that we have been two months at
Okinawa. Indeed,. Japs are still resisting east
of Manila in the Philippines. At neither place
did their original force get in any more sup
plies than it possessed at the start. No men
or materials have, gone through to them and
there is no chance that they will get any.
But on Okinawa they had accumulated
en:h artillery ammunition and supplies to
last three months, and they may last it al
though the back of their resistance is already
broken.
This is no easy war in the Pacific.
From Other
Editors
V. S. 99 vs. U. S. 97
(The Oregonian)
The Oregon highway commis
sion officially has approved des
ignation of United States high
way 99, the Pacific highway
leading to California via Rose
burg, Grants Pass, Medford and
Ashland, as an interregional
route. The campaign originat
ing in Klamath Falls to get that
designation for United States
97, the Willametto highway, was
not successful. The smoke raised
by the southern Oregon con
troversy has obscured the fact
that as yet no federal funds
have been appropriated for the
interregional highway program.
A special committee appoint
ed by President Roosevelt draft
ed the master plan for a net
work of interregional routes
over the nation, and for Oregon
tentatively designated the Pa
cific and Columbia highways.
The federal bureau of public
roads submitted the program to
congress, which has not yet act
ed. The plan calls for allocation
of $750,000,000 in federal funds
each year for about 15 years
separate from regular match
money. The amount of state par-
wmpanon nas not Deen suggest
ed. Objects of the program are
to provide postwar employment
and to eliminate national and
regional bottlenecks for military
and commercial movements.
When and if congress ap
proves the interregional high
way program, Oregon doubtless
will be required to adopt legis
lation authorizing limited free
ways, if it is to participate. The
highway commission indorsed
such legislation in the 1945 as
s e m b 1 y, but the bill failed.
Twenty-three states have laws
authorizing construction of
routes to which access is limit
ed. The interregional routes
must be uniformly of higher
standard than other federal aid
projects a two-lane highway,
for instance, requiring 24 feet
of pavement and a 10-foot grav
el shoulder on each side.
The $36,000,000, three-year
state-federal program for Ore
gon highways launched this
week by commission contracts
will not be affected in any way
by designation of the Pacific
highway as interregional, . and
the Willamette route has not
been neglected in this
The feuding from opposite sides
of the Cascade range certainly
"u une eiieci (inougn we
wouldn't go so far as to say it
was prearranged by the dis
putants). It hat rnnmnlroloj
public and perhaps commission
attention on both southern Ore
gon highways, and blacked out
the needs of other major routes.
Someone ought to stir up a
good fight over the Columbia
water grade.
' com " ' i
"You mis-icd your calling. Mom the wny you can pretty
up your face in a few minutes, I bet you d be a swell
artist on canvas!" I
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK. June 3 (API Selective
Durchasin of atrcraftj, steels and
specialties put props under tody"s stock
market aitnuugn ouuisn eninu.ia.in wu
restrained.
Closlna" Quotations:
American Can 100
Am Car 4 Fdy . TH
Am Tel & Tel nil.
Anaconda 34.
Calif Parkin Mts
.
s
Sl
-. MV
- SK's
3os
as's
i.
- uts
- I0t
- ll
SOI,
- M'.
OS-
- 39!
S3",,
.. iav.
, M
-JJOUj
- 374
- 13V,
m,
Z!t,
Warner Pictures
. 60'i
. 13!.
Potatoes
CHICAGO. Jun S (AP-WFA Pot-
toes: arrival! 53. on track 08. total U. S.
shipments 313.
New stocKi: ofrennn very mm, de
mand exceeds available supply, marktt
firm at celling; very few report tales;
California Long Whites, V. S. No. 1,
$4.63-4.69; Arizona Red Warbas, U. S.
1. $4.89: Louisiana Bliss Triumoni
and Long Whites, U. S. No. 1, M.30.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN' FRANCISCO. Jun B
fAP-WFA, Cattle: salable 250. Past two
days fully steady. Medium to good fed
steers $15.00-10.75. few packages grass
steers 914.75. Odd lots grass hellers
14.00. Good Brass cows 113.30. num
erous loads common cows 10.00-11.00.
cutters 19.00-50, canners (7.50-8.50. Me
dium to good sausage bulls sio.oo-ia.oo.
- j icauj . jai. noq (uuu v
choice slaughter calves f 14.50-13.50.
Hogs: salable 73. Firm: lew packages
good to choice 200-300 lb. barrows and
gilts $15.75. Odd sows quoted lS.OO.
Sheep: salable 2300. Fairly broad de
mand, steady. Monday, good to choice
full-woolcd lambs 114.05. quality con
sidered, several decks good $14.35-50,
medium to good feeders mostly $12.00
13.00. Shorn yearlings $10.50-12.50. Cull
to good shorn ewes $2.50-6.75.
PORTLAND. Ore.. Juna B (AP-WfAl
Salable and total cattle 100, calves 23:
market active, steady: odd common light
steers $12.00-30; good-choice fed steers
lacking; quotable to $16.00; common
medium heifers $11.30-14.50; cutters down
io siu.uu; canner-cutter cows 7.00-I0.oo;
fat dairy type cows $10.50-11.50; medium
beet cows to $12.00; medium-good saus
age bulls $10.00-12.00; good beef bulls
to $13.23; good-choice vealers scarce,
salable $15.50-18.50; few common-medium
grades $11.00-14.50.
Salable hogs 50, total 400; market
active, steady; barrows and gilts mostly
$15.75; odd head 370 lb. $15.50; sows
515 00; stags $14.50 with 70 lb. dock;
good-choice under 130 lb. feeder pigs
salable $10.50-21.00.
Salable and total sheep 400; spring
Iambs active, strong to 25 cents higher;
other classes fully steady; good -choice
springers $13.75-14.00; common light
weights downward tn to .10; anntthniem
shorn old crop lamb mostly No. I pelts
$13.15: medium-good grades $11.50-1150;
common down to slu.oa; good shorn
wes mostly $tf.73; culls down to $3.00.
CHICAGO. June 5 ( A p-WrAl Salable
hogs 7000, total 13.000; active; fully
steady; good and choice barrow and
gilts at 140 lb, up at $14.75 celling;
good and choice sows at 14.00; com
plete clearance.
Salable rattle 7300. total 7500; salable
calves 1000. total 1000; fed steers and
yearlings. Including yearling heifers
steady out very sluw; tup steers $17.00;
bulk $1330-17.23; both yearling steers
and yearling heifers In fairly broad de
mand: best heifers $17.40; largely steer
run; s lockers practically absent; cows
mostly steady to weak, cutters holding
fully steady; bulls steady to 23 cents
higher, saiuage to $13.30 and heavy berf
bulls to 13.5o; vealers steady at $10.30
down.
Salable sheen 1000. total 8500: firm
market on lambs, shorn ewes steady to
23 cents lower for two days; odd lots
native spring lambs $13 50-16.00, bucks
out at $1.00 discount, package good and
choice ttO-lb, weights at $10.00- two
decks good and choice 03-lb. fed clipped
lambs No. 1 pelt $13.15 and $13.35: two
loads medium and good shorn lambs
No. 3 pelt, $14 13: common to choice
shorn ewes $o. 00-7.73,
WHEAT
CHICAGO. Juna 8 (API Grain
futures prices declined today. There
was a oronounced lack of suoDort and
observers were of the opinion that moat
of the selling was hedging.
wneai was on at ine opening ana con
tinued to sax droDDlna as much as HaC
at times. There were no Important
rallies. Commliilon houses, with north,
west and southwest connections, were
on the selling side, reflecting increas
ing arrivals at terminals.
Corn was largely neglected.
At the close wheat was unchanged to
1 cent lower, July $1.07 . Corn was
unchanged to Vc higher. July $t.lHVi.
Oats wera He higher to 3o lower, July
M-VtC. Rye was unchanged to 4c
higher, July $1.41H-Vs. Barfey was un
changed to la higher, July $1.00.
Courthouse Records
Marriage Lleemes
SM1TH-K 1 M B A iJL Donald Paul Smith.
21. USN. Native of Oregon. Resident
of Klamath Falls, Ore. Lucy Ann Kim
ball, 21. telephone operator. Native of
California. Resident of Klamath rails,
Ore.
CATANO-rULUER. Pasquale C. Ca
ts no. 30, USMC. Native of New York.
Realdent of Klamath rails, Ore. Mar-
Siret Fuller, 20, housewife. Native ot
regon. Resident of Klamath Falls, Ore.
Justice Court
Arthur Michael Bradford, failure to
obey highway Intersection stop sign.
Fine. $5.30.
Lawrence Erwln Sowell. failure to pro.
cure operator's license. Fine, $5.50.
Robert Franklin Richardson, overload
ing truck and trailer. Fine, $33.
Earl Aubrey Petty, overloading truck
and trailer. Fine, $23.
VITAL STATISTICS
CANOKLARTA Bora at Klamath Val
ley hospital, June 3, 11145. to Mr, and
Mrs. Benjamin Candelarta. Oorrls, Calif.,
a boy. Weight: 7 pounds.
COOPEH Born at Klamath Valley
hospital, June 3, 1043. to Mr. and Mrs.
Clsrenc Cooper, 25J7 Wantland, a boy.
Weight: 7 pounds.
SISCUS born at Klamath Valley hos
pital, June 3, 1045, to Lt. ami Mm.
John a Slicua, 1537 Ivory, a boy. Weight:
9 pounds.
WATK1NS Born at Klamath Valley
hospital, June 3, 1043, to Mr. and Mrs,
John R. "Watklns, 2023 Darrow, a boy.
Weight: 8 pounds 4 ounces.
DEVELOPING
ENLARGING
PRINTING
PHOTO SERVICE
211 Undfiwood Bldg.
Telling
The Editor
Ullan prMreal here must not mer.
Wen iwi hi In Isnilh. must bs nl-
IWbi, m oni .W .1 '
enli. 7nd Bluet be slinsd. CMI.Ioul;
lelleaini Iheee rulsa, V. sml,
MEMORIES
There, re no words to comforl
unct chocr,
Tin bertxved hours of tho jobs
o clour. , , ,
Those who know her loved hor
presence, io neur:
Hur memories ulwtiys to hold
ik'ur.
My love hu departod, Just gone
way,
Making a visit to hcuvon they
say.
Do not b weary and sad today;
Sho wouldn't want It thut way.
Carry a smllo and the ttmo will
y.
Won't bo lonu sho Is over nlilh:
To guide you over tlio path of
strife,
To the gates of heaven, to a
now life.
Her faith In the Lord was ever
here,
In her works, GOD was ever
near.
Trusting in the Lord, belluvlng
HU word,
Ascending to hcuvon to receive
her reward.
Kllmboth McCain.
Smith Committed On
Assault Charge
Charles Honry Smith was
fined $90 or 25 days in tho coun
ty jail Monday by Justice J. A.
Mahnncy on a charge of assault
and battery. Ho plead guilty to
the charge, and was committed
to Jail in lieu of the fine.
The complaint was signed by
his totally blind wife. Jennie M.
Smith, who alleged Smith beat
her.
STILL A MYSTERY
Qulnino, made from tho bark
ot the chinchona tree, has been
used to control malaria for more
than 300 years, yet medical sci
ence doesn't know Just how tho
drug works,
FUNERAL
T.OtflH WILLIAM JnilNR
Funeral services for the lale Louie
William Johns, who passed away In this
clly on Monday, June 4. 1043, will be
htld In the chapel of Ward's Klamath
funeral Moms, 013 Hit h, Thursday,
June T, 11U3 at J p. m.. with Ttev. Vtctnr
Phillips of the first Methodist church
officiating. Committal sarvlces and In
terment will follow In Linkville cem
etery. Friends are respectfully Invited
to attend.
Friendly
Helpfulness
To Erery
Czeed and Pun
Ward's Klamath
Funera Home
Marguerite M. Ward
end Sons
923 High Phone 3334
BOND SALES
BOOSTED
T
DINNER HER
E
Dond sales wore uppotl by
SU.UStUS ul the dinner at tho
Will n rd Monday night spunsorutl
by business and Professional
women, Soroptltnlsts, Vonturo
club and Oregon Women's Am
bulance oorps. Applications wcro
received for 340U.3S moro.
hsthor bovclk. guest sneaker.
drew a largo uudlonco who lis
tened to hur experiences of lifo
In Hiinto Tomos Jap prison camp
with Interest and revulsion.
Seven US infantry men from
tho bond rally show, "Hero Is
Your luiaiiiry, to bo leltl to
night, were guests also, with Lt.
George Moonoy who Introduced
them as tlio "finest men In the
US army," All aro oversells vet
erans.
They demonstrated arms used
in battlo action, firing (lum
my ammunition In tho banquet
hall, Included were garand
rlflos, bazookas and flnmo throw,
ors.
The seven Infantry men pres.
ent besides Lt. Moonoy, wore
Sgt. Hokh Almgleu, Sgt. George
Lee, Sgt. Josi'pli Klinch, Cpl.
Lyman Uiiughuity, Sgt. Hob Mc
Allister. Sul. Clayton Purliam
and Ffc George Taylor. ,
Mrs. Mnoney who whs a Burst
with her husband, presented the
prize or n war Dond to Mrs, Leo
N'cMullen. Catherine rtreli re
ceived the rt-giiliir gift bond pre.
seined ui caen meollng of the
UPW.
The next meeting of the BPW
will be o picnic In the garden of
Mrs. Isnhello tlrlxner's Lake
shore home, with thn nnnimza
nrouo In chnrite of arrangements.
Further details will be an
notinecd Inter.
Members of the DPW will be
In charge of USO entertainment
Sunday, June 24. Homemade
pies will bo served as refresh
ments. ROMAN EAUTHOHAKKS
Although ancient Koine hail
numerous earthquakes, there
were never any of outstanding
destruction. Some historians con
tend that many of the rtoman
nalaces and temples said to have
been destroyed by bnrbnrlans be
tween the fifth and ninth cen
turies were really shaken down
by quakes.
FASTEST 8H0..
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U II IIILIX.m LT1
JOHN N. ADAMS
Constil Ajut
Life, Accident, HealUi, (J
ana rcnjion utvuvxt
1112 Public Servlct Bc3
Portland 4, Onion,
Acme Spray Painters
Farms and Dairies
OUR SPECIALTY
ALSO ROOF PAINTING
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL
PHONE 3271 MEDFORD
IN THE 1D13IV
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
no rtn no oospitalizaxion
No Loss of Tlmo
Formations ftosnltsl
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Calr.praotlo rn.alelag
- fsqalr. ThasUO BIS.
raoiis 7Ma
NOW AVAILABLE
(To All Users)
Adding Machine
Calculators
New Royal Typewriters
DESKS CHAIRS riLEg
S.rWco on All Machines
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO
122-124 S. 9th, Klamath Falls
J
ER'S SEAT
'1
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS,
TOM: "It's mighty nice to receive a com
pliment like you've ju6t given us, Judge. We
db take our responsibilities very seriously
and try to do the right tiling with every
body. In spite of it, wc get criticized now
and then."
OLD JUDGE: "I know . . . you've got to
lake the bitter with the sweet in times like
these. Speaking of criticism, and I mean
really unfair criticism, rcmindB me of the
spirit beverage business,"
FRANK: "How Is that, Judge?"
OLD JUDGE: "Simply thls...
think of any other business In wMi
seller Is responsible for what the buyer o
with his merchandise? If a person tit
mutU cake and gets indigestion, W i M
iBn't blamed. Nor is tho coffee mam
criticized if someone drinks too muewn
and can't sleep. But the sc Her of tW
erages gets blamed plenty if one ol m "J
tomcrs overindulges. Doesn t koii m
fair, does it, Tom?"
TOM: "Frankly, it doesn't, Judp. W
never looked at it that way before.
....
THE TINKERER ; ; ; who knows his automobile Inside
out, itches to take things apart, fusses over the least
little noise in his car's engine. He swears by RPM Motor '
Oil because it MINIMIZES SLUDGE that plugs oil lines,
clogs filters and sometimes runs up repair bills.
RPM Motor Oil Takes Batter Care of your Car, too
Farmers Attention!
We kill, dress and chill your fiogs Vac per pound.
We cure and smoko your ham and bacon So per
pound.
We havo the best facilities. Our work Is guaran
teed. WHY PAY MORE?
JOHNSON PACKING C
THE HOME OF QUALITY MEATS
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