If
.-:
i
!
' rOUR HERALD AND MEWS
,,, , riANK mnuna ' Malcolm epk
" Editor iliiwgtni IdJlor
A UoisoreiT omblnatioei of the Bveaus Herald ul Ik
Klamath Nam. pubMabeel every afiernooa except Sua day
B ctpJwudt and Pin Itmtt, MUamati) ralle. Oraffon. or too
T MoroJd Publlaoloi Co. ood too New. Puhllahlng Company.
Kntarad ai eecosd eleee mettw ot IB
? roUa. Ore.. OO Auguet ao, ivua. uooar osi w
,.' Marcb i, UTB
UBSOUPTION RATISl
memo Tfta Br mall ,
ml
Br Barrier ,
earner
rear 17 SO By mall
- Outalda ICamato, Lake. Modoe. Waklrou
Member.
AaeooUtod Praao
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
LIGHTNING played over the Klamath coun
try Sunday evening, and today there were
expected reports of lightning fires In the timber
country.
All that can be done about
lightning fires Is to have an
efficient organization ready to
detect them and squelch them.
There is no prevention
method. Despite manpower
problems, that' organization
t . has been completed. V
' But natural causes ' like
J lightning or not so serious a
threat to our vital timber re-
sources are as careless men . EPLEY
j' and women. Man-made fires are preventable.
" t
S One Fire's Toll
jv yo drive home to men and women of this
area the disaster that can come from care
lessness with fire, we -have some interesting
figures today compiled by Walter Wlesen-
, danger, Klamath's Keep Oregon' Green chalr-
man. ',- r .C".
" Walt took the Metollus river fire in the Des
w chutes national forest in June as the basis for
j! his lesson in the . need for caution In fire
it, weather.
J- The Metollus fire destroyed more than 4,000,
000 feet of virgin timber. Now those cold
" figures may not mean much to the average
layman, and Walt has translated them into sta
tistics that may be more significant. -
It would take 400 cars to transport 4,000,000
feet of timber. Finished, this timber would
fill 160 carloads;
The destroyed timber would mako 200 com
plete 5-room modern houses.
It would make 2,000,000 cases of canned
goods. "'
It would build 4 mobile drydocks each hav
ing 1,000,000 board feet
It would make 16 flight decks for carriers
such as the Lexington.
It would make 310,000 cases for 105 mm.
shells.
It would mean the loss to one average mill
' of SO days cutting, or a payroll loss- of $100,000.
e e . .
Critical Material
1 ADD to Walter's figures the thought that
f lumber is the No. 1 critical war.' material
J right now.; Lumber comes from trees" that can
a be destroyed by fire.: More trees that .produce
2 lumber stand in Oregon than any other state.
Z , Locally, lumber payrolls. run into millions of
dollars annually. Thousands of Klamath homes
- depend on our timber resource. .-
The war has cut deeply into that resource for
. reasons that are beyond our control. We must
not let carelessly-caused fire waste any of
what is left. :
All of this is hard-boiled economics and war
effort The forests mean something else to our
people, tt is in the deep, cool woods, beside
s. a rushing stream, that work-weary people find
beauty, release, and a new understanding of
' life. All of this is at our mercy.
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLONy
A ASHLNGTON, July 9 In two previous
! VY columns published June 27 and 29, 1
j concluded the Russian system is not commun
ism, socialism, bolshevism or Marxism, but a
! y despotism in the name of (but not by) the
1 I lowest class " economically, intellectually and
I spiritually, and I came to the decision our
i democratic way of life had no valid grounds for
i fear of Russia except from the governmental
: .? standpoint
'; 2 Her people are friendly, likeable, not grim
, like their government, and her production and
2 her methods, as well as her social results, are
' 2 so far Inferior to ours that our lowest share
; cropper or poorest-paid worker would think he
was in heaven now, if fully informed of com-
parative conditions.
' " I narrowed the ground of Irritation and pos
, sible trouble between us, to the single factor
of the political attitude of the Russian govern
; Z, ment, in my search for a common ground of
- genuine understanding which would enable us
Z to live in peace in the postwar world.
Unlike her people, her economics and her
j production, her socio-communal despotic gov
OBITUARY ,
MARY JANE PIPER
Mary Jan Piper, Infant daughter of
Mr, and Mis, Luther Piper of this city,
passed away Saturday, July 7, 1949 at
2 p. m. She was a native of Klamath
Falls and wai aged 2 yean and 29 days
at th time of her passing. Beside
ner parents, sne is survived by a sister,
Jim Ray Piper and grandparents, Mr,
and Mrs. Albert Keltev of Keno. OreToti.
The remains rest at Ward's Klamath
.runers. Home, Higti. yuneru an
nouncement appear In this Issue
FUNERALS
COLWELL TWINS
Anthony and Eugene Col well. Infant
on of Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Col
well of this city passed awtfy on Satur
day, July 7, 1945. At the time of their
death they were two days old. Sur
- vlvlng besides their parents are one
lister, Margaret Ann and two brothers,
Dan Francis and John Donald Col well,
all of thl city; the grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Burke of Merrill. Ore.,
and Mr. and Mrs, Dan Colwell of Klam
ath Falls, Ore. Services were held at
ML Calvary Memorial Park, Monday,
- -A GEM of THOUGHT
A young gal on a train, named Bunnell,
Was lit clear up to the gunnall; .
Sho saw some sailors and ost a yelp
Just a loud cry for help
As th train thundered into a turmoil.
LIP STICK 10c to $1.00
From Doe and Idella's Drug Store
Phont
ernment is
belligerent
and therefore
editors who
poetottlce at Klamam
.1 otontba as.ts
yea eeoe
eoUQUea year 7 00
Member Audit '
Bureau Circulation
is eliminated,
nations. If their
..! r litll .1 . earltfri Ka Bate
John Phelan of Sacred Heart church
of this city officiating. Arrangements
were under the direction of the Earl
wmtlocx iTunerai nonw ui uut civ.
Iff ART JANE PIPES
Funeral services for tha late Mary
Jane Plpv. who passed away in this
city Saturday, July 7, 1949, will be
held in the chapel of Ward's Klamath
jrunerai nome, i-iign, weanesaay,
July 11, 1945 at 2 p. m. with Rev. Cecil
C. Brown of the First Baptist church
officiating. Commits! services and In
terment will follow In Lfnkvllla cem
etery. Friends are respectfully invited
to attend service.
Courthouse Records
23. USMC. )uUveot TlortdT Resident
of Klamath Falls, Oo"""
GRISSOM-DINGLER. Marion Fran
cU Grlssom, 21, USMC. Native of
Kansas. Resident at Imnnria. irn
Loi Jean Dingier. 18, secretary. Ma-
8466
Monday. Julr . 1845
competitive, aggressive, sometimes
and nearly always unfathomable,
frightening, or at least unsettling.
The core of this trouble can be found in
.the conclusions . made by our globe-girdling
went out for three months to pro
mote a free press. They ottered an interesting
report, expressing hope that a pledge for free
exchange of information, without censorship or
political use of news, would be incorporated at
San Francisco. (It was not.)
e a e
Inter-Dependent
I JUDGE also they did not find much hope
for press liberty, or even much will for it.
outside of the British Empiro and the United
States. You cannot have liberty without a
free press, and you cannot have a free press
without liberty.
The San Francisco agreement pledged free
dom of language, but what good is that, with
out freedom of speech?
But what does Russia think? Her editors
were so far from our line of thought as to be
completely incomprehensible of our meaning
of freedom. They think it is freedom to work
under a complete government censorship of all
their news not just military news, but econ
. omic news, political news and every other kind.
They write only what the government wants,
' and the government is singleheaded dictator
ship operated by one legal party of 4,000,000
people in a population of 183,000,000..
From the news standpoint, as from overy
other, Russia has walled herself in against
the world, completely Isolated herself. Our
reporters there are confined to the Hotel Metro
pole for living room, may not fraternize with
Russian officials or people, can get news only
which has been printed in the few official
government papers.
But their reporters roam the United States
at will, indeed even have representatives attend
all our open press conferences, including those j
of the president,, and writo freely anything
they wish. -
How is it possible to live in peace with a
completely self-isolated nation, which believes
freedom is suppression, and liberty is auto
cracy? If understanding is the basis of peace,
how are we ever going to know Russia, with
out free news from her, much less understand
her?-: -
I have heard some people say she suffers
from an inferiority complex. Perhaps. It is
true also her government seems to be Slavic
in personality, and therefore can be sensitive
at the same time it is suspicious, emotionally
aggressive and even belligerent
a a e
Afraid Of People
PERHAPS, also, she is afraid to let her own
people know too much, fcnd therefore feels
she must censor any understanding of their
government by them as well as by us? .
I might attempt to track down the why of
this were it not true that the same attitude
of the government extends far beyond news
into other fields. Russia refused to go into our
air conference at Chicago, even to discuss let
ting airplanes go over her country. As mat
ters stand now, she has isolated her air from
the world as completely as she has isolated her
land and her news.
Before the war all our world flyers had
trouble getting permits to cross Russia. To get
intq Russia by land or sea is as difficult a
task as .by air. In all ways Russia seems bent
on: living outside the normal world, and she
is taking all she can get of Europe: into the
same impenetrable subterranean chamber of
isolation with her.
, How are you going to live in peace with that,
whether you love it, appease it or hate it?
I hear . some people attribute this all to
Russia's suspicions of us or of Britain. Suspic
ious of what? No one wants Russia. No one
around here would have it. I do not think
ther ground for Russian isolationism is "sus
picion" or "fear." It might be an Inferiority
complex, and it might be purposeful politics.
Whatever interpretation you accept, the con
clusion is inescapable that unless this situation
there cannot be peace.
The first thing I would do to put us on an
even mutual plane is to have congress enact
a law putting us on a reciprocal basis as to
rights. Whatever rights Russia grants us, we
would grant her.
The law should, of course, apply to all
system requires them to house
our news correspondents in isolation, her cor
respondents should be similarly- restricted in
this country; If her air is closed to the United
States, our air must be closed to her.
If she denies our citizens' the right to free
travel in her country, her citizens should not
have the right to free travel here. If the
democratic party is denied representation in
Moscow, the communist party should enjoy no
rights among us. If our press is suppressed
there, hers must be suppressed here. ,
This should be done, not in any belligerent
way, but merely as acceptance of her prin
ciples for her, retaining ours for our own
people. It should be a basis of mutual under
standing whereby we both may live In perman
ent noncompetitive peace. '
Thus, we could eliminate irritants which are
bound to make for trouble, and do it fairly
and justly, without criticism or antagonism.
Thus, also, we can eliminate both fear apd
suspicion.
tlve of Oregon. Resident of Klamath
Falls, Ore.
Complaints Filed
Wilms Sprlggs vs. Alired Sprlggs,
Suit for divorce. Charge, cruel and in
human treatment. Plaintiff ask cus
tody and support of three minor children.
Couple married June 14, 1941, at Stev
enson, wain. 1 win Duemori attorney
for plaintiff.
Justice Court
Bernard Beriortl Hooper, operating
motor vemcie wim improper license
pis ics. cine, a-7u.
WHEAT
CHICAGO, July 9. (APf Grain futures
were xirmer most os me time toaay on
buying apparently induced partly by
uniavorabie domestic w earner and re
ports that European grain crops would
oe me worn since um war siariea.
July rve futures, restricted by th
boara of trade to closing out operations,
dipped and climbed over rnnge of as
much as U'A cents as small transactions
axieciea prices greauy.
Hcdsins Drbi.iire unshed wheat
below the previous close at times. Oats
showed Independent strength, gaining
a cent at times unaer commission no use
purchases.
Wheat closed ViC lower to Ho higher
than thep revlous finish, July fi.teW
corn was unchanged to ric up, July
fl.18',4, oat were to ?c higher, July
Wjc, rye was up tic to uuwn
wltn only July showing the big loss at
fl.44141.44, and barley was unchanged
to Vac hlgner, July 11.15,
By board of trade order, dealings In
July rye are restricted to closing out of
long and short positions, so smail trans
actions had a big elfect on prices.
Shortly after a firm opening, effort to
sell a moderate amount oi July rye
caused a break of more than S cent.
Within a few minutes attempt to buy
an even smaller quantity quickly re
stored price to about the previous
close.
A food shloDlnsr demand was reoort-
d for oats. A bullish actor in all
grains was continued unfavorable
weather In areas where corn Is grow
ing and wheat 1 being harvested.
Classified Ads Brirjg Hcsulis.
SIDE GLANCES
core, tea ov ststtevKt, m,t.i. me tamr. oar.
"Give me halt a dozen cookies I've got to lke the edge
off my appetite before I go home and face another tcr.
rible supper like we had last nifihtl"
Market
Quotations
NtW YORK, July 9 (APv Stocks
moved Irregularly higher In today's
roaricei wtin especial turenftn ejuuouea
by assorted favorite.
While dealings were relatively glow
from the start, tains of fractions to
three point or so predominated near
the fourth hour although loser were
pteauiui,
Closing
C losing- Quotations:
American
ian .-
- 52
. 34.
CatlX Packing
Cat Tractor
Commonwealth A
Curtis-Wright
General Electric
General Motor
Gt Nor By pfd
Illinois Central
Int Harvester
Kennecott
. 33
: iH
. 43
. oata
. aa-a
. J7
. Uti,
. M,
. 0'.
. l'l
. U
. 1
. XS
. 334a
. 40H
. 11a
. 30
. 2t
. US
. 30th
locxntea
Long-Bell "A"
Montgomery Ward
Nash-Kelv
N Tf Central
Northern Pacific ,
Pac Gaa & tt
Packard Motor w
Penna R R .....
Republic Steel
Richfield OH .
Safeway Store
sear HoeDucK
Southern Pacific
120.
S3t,
- 33 .
Standard Brand ,
Sunshine Mlnlns ,
. 13(4
iTBnwunerica w
union ou taut m
Union Psclflc
U S Steel
Warner Pictures
- 33
..130
- low
1
Potatoes
CHICAGO. July 9 (AP-WFA) Pota
toes: arrival 159,.on track 189, Total
S. shipment Saturday 337, Sunday
New stocks: offerings light, demand
good, market steady at celling for best
stocks: California 100-lb. sacks of Long
White. U. S. No. 1, g4.07-4.2S; com
mercial, S3.B0-4.19; Missouri Cobblers,
U. 8. No. 1, g3.30-3.9a.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Julr
(AP-WfA) CatUe: aalable 800. Active,
atrons with laat weelc'a W centa ad
vance. iMka good 1200 lb. elecra held
lo.ao. About vo head north coaat srasa
1120 lb. steera ,15.60. Two cara aood
cowa held ,14.00. Medium aged cowi
ei2.wu.uu. cannera ana cutiera iirm.
early moetly S8.0O-10.00. Common to
Jood aauaage bulla I10.SO-12.S0. Calvea:
). Active, ateady. Choice quoted
115.50, good 300 lb. calvea ,19.00, com
mon and medium ,11.00-13.00.
Hoga: aalable 100. Firm; few pack
agea 200-325 lb. good and choice bar
rowa and gilte ,13.73; odd good low,
115.00.
Sheep: aalable 9000. Early undertone
ebout ateady; good and cnolce iamba
quoted ,14.00-75; cull to good ewea.
S3.00-7.00.
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 0 tAP-WTA
Salable cattle 1S00, total 2200; unable
calvea 330, total 400; market lalriy
active, fully ateady on all clatsea; two
loads fooa- 1230-1330 lb, ffrau steers
fl0.25-7o; one load good ted yeerllnK
steera 848 lbflT flS.tiS; 'Jul medium
trade Ioada 914.2S-19.30; common down
to 111.00; good he if era scarce; several
loads medium grade 12.25-14.00; com
mon kind 810.00-12. Ou; several loads
good cows 912.25-13.00; medium grades
i 10.73-12,00; cutter-common 17,76-10,50 j
canners 80.50-7.73; shelly kinds down
to 13.00; few good weignty beef bulla
913.23; bulk good kinds 912.00-13.00;
good aauaage bulls $11.00-50; medlun
fr&dss 9S.SO-14.73; cutter-common 97.50
9.23; odd head strictly choice 914.30
16.00; common-medium 910.0O-14.2S; culls
down to 93.00.
Salable hogs 250, total 1100: market
active, fully steady at celling; bulk bar
rows and gilts 915.73; sows and stags
f generally 915.00; feeder pigs SO cents
ower; strictly choice light kinds at
922.00; bulk 73-103 lbs. 120.00-22.00.
Salable sheep 2300, total 2800; market
fairly active, generally ateady on ell
classes; small lota selected spring lambs
914.23; bulk good 1 -choice 913.50-14.00;
medium grades 911.75-13.23: common
down to 99.00; about two loads good
104 lb. yearling wethers, No. 1 pelts,
91125, welghea off cars; small lots
strictly choice ewes 98.30; bulk good
choice 95.75-6.00; medium-good 95.00
50; common down to 93.00: small lota
feeding lambs 910.00.
CHICAGO. July 0 (AP-WFA) Salable
hogs 4000, total 8300; active and fully
steady; good and choice barrows and
gills at 140 lbs. up at 914.75 celling;
good and choice sows at 914.00; com
plete clearance.
Salable cattle 17,000. total 17,500; aal
able calves 1000, total 1000; fed steers
and yearlings generally steady; strictly
good and choice kinds active, others
rather alow at 916.00 downward; top
918.00; alzable supply 917.50-17.85; gen
eral bulk 917.75-17.50; heifers slow,
steady; best 917.75; cows again very
scarce, firm; light cutters 98.50 down;
moat beef cows 89.50-12.90; steady to
strong market on bulls end vealers;
welhtv sauaaea bulla to tia.so: mmtiv
9)5.00 down on fat beef bulls; vealers
916.00 down; stock cattle In very mod
erate supply, steady.
Salable sheep 500, total 6500; scat. red
sales about steady but hardly enouah
spring lambs here to test prices; few
nod native anrlnaf lambs tttirwv inmlu
llscounted $1,00; good and choice kinds
ATTENTION ,
EAGLE'S AUXILIARY
Regular Meeting Might
Has Been Changed
from Friday night to Tuesday night
First Meeting, Tucs., -July 10 i
8:00 P. M. " '
Lowty FOE Hall
o A &
r-t.
RE
(Continued from Page One) .
Big Three might have to resolve
Col. Frank Howley, chief of
the military government of the
United States occtmation zone.
declared last night he expected
tne major powers to decide with
in a few days on an overall plan
ot government for Berlin, but
ho disclaimed personal knowl
edge ot the immediate Issues ot
food and lucl.
Colin Kelly School To
Be Built Of Lumber
EUGENE. Julv S m The
Colin Kelly junior high school
here will be built with wood
not brick or marble because
any other typo of construction
would be a "dlsaroce to the
state" so dependent on lumber
ing lor its welfare, lumbermen
declared today.
H. J. Cox, secretary-manager
of the Willamette Volley Lum
bermen's association, wired Con
gressman Ellsworth of this de
cision after the WPB reported
only a "possibility1' of priority
for the school. Cox said Ells
worth told him the WPB may
approve the construction it mills
producing 5000 feet or less can
provide the wood.
"The WPB knows, or should
IrnAur i-mllla iKnt emntl in nn
tetUln wcstern Oregon-" Cox
Cherry Harvest To
Be In Full Swing
HOOD RIVER. July 9 im
Cherry harvesting will be in
full swine the end of this week.
growers said today as canners
geared for capacity operation.
J. . Klahrc, Apple Growers
association general manager,
said the crop will about equal
last year's, when 90 carloads
were shipped.
MISTAKEN IDENTITY
TWIN FALLS, Ida., July 7 (P)
With a box reserved for all four
nights of the rodeo here, Mayor
Harry Denton of nearby Kim
berly decided to share his choice
space with a serviceman.
Spotting a uniformed man
heading for, the ticket office,
Denton cheerfully led him to the
box where he discovered his
guest was a laundry truck
driver.
WEATHER
Sunday. July 8, 1948
Eugene
Klamath Falls
Sacramento
North Bend'Z.
Portland
Iteno ,
San Francisco
Seattle
Med ford
Aed Bluff ...
Max. jHin. rracip.
-.-.04 55 ,00
.05
.J)3
M
4ft
...9t
m
,....84
Trace
. .00
.00
Trace
72
Northern California Partly .eloudy to
day, tonight and Tuesday with high
fog on the coast and scattered after
noon thunderstorms over the mountains.
Cooler In northern Interior today.
Gentle to moderate wind off the coaat,
mostly northwesterly.
Oregon Clear north and partly cloudy
south portion today, tonight and Tues
day. Fog on coast. Scattered after
noon thunderstorms south portion and
slightly cooler today,
held above 918.30: few medium and food
914.90-19.30 with common sort outs 913.00;
w swu mnt cngicfj ma crop snorn
Iamba No. 1 pelts 918.00: short loads
comoarahle ffrndea held hlrhur: ihnm
aged ewes 96-30 to 98,00.
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO fAIN NO BOmMTAtlZATIOX
Ne Lei, ef Time
Ffrmaoent eaaliel
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Celrepraelle Ptafalelan
Ne. Ilk - eieelre Tb.alie Blt
rtaae IM.
INDUSTRIAL
CENTERS HIT
IN B-29 RAID
(Continued from Pago One)
to aircraft ordnnnco manufac
ture It has a population ot lti2,-
uuu.
Stool Cantor
Waknyama lies 30 miles south
of the Osaka-Kobo Industrial
area. Having a population o(
105,000, it Is on ugriculturul
marketing center that hits boon
industrially expanded for wtir
production. Large steel works,
a chemical plant and mimorouu
small mnrliio engine and motnl
aim wood-worKing plants are lo
cated there
Scndai has a papulation of
i2i,uuu ana is me largest city
In northeastern Japan. A major
rail hub, it is the administrative
center for tha northern area of
Honshu and has extcnslvo war
time industrlul aiul munitions
plants.
Yokkalcht, located near N."v
goya, Is the slto of the Utsubo
oil refinery. It was attacked by
Superfortresses on Juno 22 and
OUAM, July S () Flying
new "Jack", fighter plnnc,
Japan's recently-idle combat
pilots jumped into tne aerial
warfare over the homeland
again Sunday, trying vulnly to
(tern the assault of long-range
American Mustangs from iwo
Jlma, which ravaged Tokyo air
fields for tha fourth time In
five days.
The Iwo-based Mustangs, Ok
inawa-based Marine Corsairs
and navy search planes destroy
ed or damaged SO Nipponese
planes many on the ground
sank eight small coastal ships
and damaged six others. Soven
Mustangs were the only Amer
ican planes reported mining
from the day's far-ranging
forays which struck nearly
every section ot Japan's shrink
ing empire.
MEAT SHIPMENTS
(Continued From Pago One)
for the United Kingdom and thfc
armed forces of tlie allied na
tions. Early In the war, the British
and Amorlcan governments
agreed to make the British gov
ernment the sole purchaser of
meats In Argentina. This agree
ment took into account the fact
that before the war the British
were the principal buyer of Ar
gentina's exportable supply.
Baby Kidnaped
From Hospiial
MARION. O.. July 0 (IFl A
diaper today provided tho (Irat
posslblo cluo In tho dlsnppenr
ance of tho six-day-old daugh
ter of an overseas veteran and
a Marlon society matron.
The baby, bluc-eyed. dark'
haired Jean Eileen Crivcstnn,
was taken from her crib In the
city hosDitnl last nlsht.
Police Chief William E. Marks
disclosed that tho diaper, be
longing to tho hospital, was
found In the western section of
this city last night, but declined
'to give details for fear their pub
lication might impedo tho Inves
tigation. Tho mother, Mrs. John L.
Crcviston, was removed from
tho hospital to the homo of her
parents.
Cameras Stolen From
Naval Officer Here
Li. Comdr. R. K. Gould,
Klamath naval air station, rc-
fiorted to city police today the
oss of two cameras from his car.
cither here or near Modoc Point.
The cameras, wcro valued ot
$200.
The cameras wcro in a leath
eret shopping bag along with
some baby clothes, Gould told
police. Both cameras had his
name on them with a Tacoma
address and anyone finding tho
lost articles should cither con
tact Gould at tho air station or
notify city police.
I 111 MAIN (TBHT I
Farmers Attention!
We kill, dress and chill your hogs Vac per pound.
We cure and smoke your ham and bacon 5c per
' . pound. i
We have the best facilities. Our work It guaran
teed. WHY PAY MORE?
JOHNSON PACKING CO.
JjjLHOMjOF QUALITY MEATS PHONE 5323
THE WAR
, TODAY
(Continued From Pago Ono)
to congress,
said in part:
At that time he
MTF Japancno Insist on contlnu
A Ing resistance beyond the
point of reason, their country
will suffer the same destruction
as Cerninny, Our blows will
destroy their whole modern In
dustrial plant and organluitlon,
which they liavo bulltup during
the past ontury and which Ihry
aro now devoting to a hopeless
cause.
"We have no desire or lntan
tlon to destroy or enslave the
Japancso people. But only sur
render can prevent the kind of
ruin which they have scon come
tu uciniany as a result of con
tinned, useless reslslauco."
If Jupim were smart she would
surrender now, thereby saving
herself useless punishment and
luresuiiung riussia s possible en
trance into uiu contact,
3
NEW LAKES
(Continued from Page One)
flclul respiration : until state
police arrived upon the scene
with rcsuscltutors. Two sailor
brought up the bodies which
wero sold to huvo been In 12
luct ot water.
Mrs, Thompson was taken to
mo Klamath Valley hospital by
tho Merchant's Patrol ambu
lance whoro she - Is aufforlnit
from auvoro shock. The bodies
wore returned to Klomath Falls
by Ward's. Closest relatives
nave been notified.
ThoniDson and his fnmllv
come hero from Berkeley. Calif..
to tako the position o( parts
manager of the Bulslgor Motor
company. Ho hod lived - here
for only six months. His homo
was in San Diego, Calif., where
nis moiner resides.
Became Tired
Stewart, a poor swimmer.
was somo distance behind some
olhor boys heading for shore
irom a rait about 10D feet out.
The other boys, all stationed at
the forest service blister rust
control camp on Unldn creek,
saia no became urea and sunk
before they could reach him.
About four hhuri' artificial
respiration, supervised by Dr.
Fred Thompson of Salem, vaca
tioning at the lako. failed to
revive tne boy.
Reclamation Heads
Impressed On Visit
Officials of tho regional of
flee of the U. S. bureau of
reclamation. Sacramento. wero
favorably impressed with prog
ress oi me project in luamulli
basin area, on their tour last
week, William Tlngiey of the
riiumain omco reported.
Tho visiting officials noted
Iho condition of crops, dralnago
practices, ana became acquaint
ed with tho situation In gen
eral. Tho wildlife phase of the
firogram was fully outlined by
ish and wildlife men.
Study Of Goose Lake
Streams Started
. LAKEVIEW, Julv 9 (P) Pre
llmlnnrv elurlu nf ,t..n.n. i
Goose Lako valley as sites for
surplus water reservoirs has
boon started by tho Lako county
bureau of reclamation.
County Wntermu.itor Phil
Smith Is assisting U. S. engineers
In the survey, expected to lake
two years.
ATTENTION
FARMERS
We pqy highest
cash prices for LIVE
or DRESSED POUL
TRY. Phone SI 75,
or tee your nearest
Safowoy markot
operator.
SAFEWAY
Proves Wonderful
For Itching Skin!
To promptly soothe Itching, burning
skin of Eczema, Pimples, Athlete's
Foot and similar akin and scslp irrl-
tat Ions duo to external causa apply
medicated,
86 years,
hoallnff.
Over 25,000,000 packages sold. First
trial convinoesl In S
sizes. All drugstores. 7 pa 111 II
1
OVER WEEKEND
ES
If ISLANDS
(Continued From Pfge One)
ships and small craft wore sunk
or damaged, unci 04 enemy
planes destroyed. Including tha
SUBMARIN
CLOSE IN ON
iirsi Hgiiroaxivo iigmars encoun
tered over the enemy homulund
In mure than a month,
The allies acknowledged that
Japanese Kuiulliiuo s u 1 cl d a
plane attacks duimiged three
Itrltish ulrcraft carriers, ami
Nipponese murine assault units
lauded on the East China "Inva
sion coast" near Amoy,
Tho Chlnesn high command
reported Its troops had captured
Chdiniikwun, south guard puss,
and drove through this gateway
to Indo-Chlna In pursuit of Japa
nese soldiers who were retreat
ing In confusion.
Nations Idle
Fall To 40,000
By The Associated Press
Tho national total of slrlkj.
Idlo fell to the 40 000 mark to. J
day for tho first tlmo In nearly "
a month.
Contributing to the brighten
ed labor picture were the re
turn to work of strikers In De.
Irnlt and Cleveland and the dis
solution of a threat of new trou
bles In the Akron rubber Indus
try. A strike nf B24 polishers, CIO
United Aiitnmnbllo Workers,
ended at the Graham-Paige Mo
tors corporation plant In Detroit
and production of aircraft con
nection rods was resumed,
: f
Removal Of Points
On Lamb Sought v,
PORTLAND. July 0 (!) Ore.
gon meal dealers have asked
Senators Cordon and Morso to
sock OPA removal of points on
lamb during the peak season to
make euro meat will reach con
sumers. Milton H. Wolfe, president of
tho Independent Detail Meat
Dealers' association, warned
OPA easing of slaughtering
quotas will not solvo the soft
lamb situation because customer.
do not have enough red points.
rroue sain oiaca, murKOting '
will be encouraged unless OPA
clears the channolt all tho way
irom sneep men to meat count
Hans Norland rire Insurance).
Phona 1080.
I Mora people' ore killed 1
and Injured each year
I by automobiles than die I
from natural causes. I
I
I
I
YOUH
I
jjoU off. JloMiioH
asi-nssiMTiNo rni
I MUTUAL BENEFIT I
Hoalth and Accldont
Aia'e. ef Omeea
III N. Ilk rkaee mi
I
DEVELOPING
ENLARGING
PRINTING
PHOTO SERVICE
ail Underwood Blda.
NOW AVAILABLE
(Te All Uierel
Adding Machlnoa
Calculator
New Royal Typewriters
DISKS CHAIRS ril.tS
' S.rvlee en All Machine,
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO.
122-124 S. 8th, Klamath Falls
HARORD
Aeeldeal sad ladeeinllgr Coeapeay:
INSURANCE
T.B. WAITERS
Gtneral Insurance Agency
FIRE . . . AUTOMOBILE
615 Main Bt. Phone 4183