Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 01, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    ISOfJ
URGES
FIVE BILLION
TAX (TO
(Contlmii'd from Pwlo One)
of the hluli wartime excises on
such thlnuK uh lur couis, jew
elry, cosmetics and transport!!
lion. Tim oxcinca tindur this
rcKulutlon would rolum next
July to tho 1IH2 luvcl, thus
halving tho tux on ninny of tlio
so-called luxury items. Vinson
mild thin would result in m)
annual reduction of $1)47,000,
000 In oxclso, tax collections.
4, A loinpiiriiry freeze of tho
iiiclul security tax at tho prcs
cut ono pur cunt rule iixulnst
puy envelopes of employes und
payroll of employers, not per
mlltliiK un automatic rive to 2.5
per cent UKiiliml each Hut for
January ho iih to nlvo con
gress an opportunity to review
tho whole Hoclal security pro
gram. Immediately after Vinson pre
sented tliu adminlHlratlun pro-
fram, repiililli'ans announced
hey would nllclc by their pro
posal to slush Individual taxes
by 20 per cent "ucross the
board."
In presenting the ailmlnlslra
lion's tax-lriniminK program,
Vinson voiced confldenco In tho
future of the American econ
omy, saying "the war has de
monstrated that this is a 1200,
000,000,000 country; an annual
gross national product of $200,
000,000,000 at present prices Is
within our reach."
IHit Vinson said the big no
tional debt and tho responsibil
ity to B!l,000,000 government
bond holders clemancl careful
consideration In tax writing.
The secretary declared that
In no ovenl should tax reduc
tions next year go beyond
$9,000,000,000.
SPUD FIELDS ACUTE
(Continued from Page One)
or of the Klamath Potato Grow
ers association and tho farm la
bor commlttco have asked conn
ty school authorities to consldei
tho situation and do what they
could to aid in tho harvest.
Tho acrciiga In the Klamath
busln this year I approximately
27.800, of which 23,000 ocres re
in i n undug as of October 1
Shipment huvo been fairly reg
ular for tho post two week
reaching tho season's high o
around 70 cars per day,
80,000 Jews Gassed
At Belsen,
Physician Says
; (Continued from Pago One)
barber and dentist. Hair Is re
moved, all teeth aro pulled out
before they aro cremated.
Thosa who wcro unable to en
tcr tho overcrowded uas chum
ber wcro lined up near trenches
net shot."
' Asked by tho prosecutor who
was tho commundunt of tho
camp during this period, tho
Witness replied: "Kramer."
Josef Kramer is tho chief of
45 defendants.
Kram.r Watchad Killings
Bcnclcll said that 500 persons
wore shot In tho neck by SS
guards and added that Kramer
was present at tho mass killing.
Asked to enter tho well of
the court and faco tho accused,
the witness hurried out of the
witness box and with a wave
of his hat pointed out Kramer
and SS Or. Fritz Klein.
Gas on Stomach
fteikr tn I nkwiM W4 mom ate
Ini in, our turn if h and heartburn, doclnra utility
trmrib the fiMMt'trilni Rilflnt known tot
?nplAinitl0 relief merilrlnei lUe Ihnte In 1111
ihUu. No laiatlte. Uell-ini brlnn ewnfnrt tn a
jm or return Douie 10 ui lor iMUDie nmuy ttut, wm
THE STANDARD
CLEANERS
Announce.'
1. The Renewal, Effective Oct. 1
of City-Wide
DELIVERY SERVICE
Phone 3400
2. The Immediate Opening of a
LADIES1 DRESSMAKING, AL
TER ATION and TAILO RING
Dept.
3. The Installation of a Complete
Dyeing Dept.
NOTE! Customers having garments In our plant, pleaio
call for them to avoid confusion.
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued from Page Ono)
bare ohanco that In tlmu war
inuy bo less llkely.
THE RAK flier has lost leg.
Ho has un artificial ono that
removes from him tho pitiful und
humiliating (piullty of looking
different from other people.
Artificial limbs uro wonderful
things. But thoy are Intricate
affairs, Expert uso oi them rc
quires oxtenslvo physical rc
educutlon.
llo hasn't had time for that
ml. lie In starting t long
oumev alone, with lot of
luggage. People aro surprising
ly thoughliul und hclpuil in
unobtrusive ways thul keen him
from thinking of himself as
handicapped, Ho senses what is
happening, and is grutoful for It.
Wo pnuso at a station around
4 p. m. tho tea hour. Urltlsh
nil I roads havo an astonishing
equipment of cups and plates,
you gel on mo train, get your
tea and sandwiches, or cukes, or
what havo you, at t tea stand
on tho platform and carry them
back onto tho truin with you
und leuvo tho cup and plute un
der tho scut when you aro fin
ished. Somehow they seem to
get redistributed.
In the most casual manner
Imaginable, one of the young
majors brings the handicapped
ItAF man a cup of tcu und what
goes with It, accepting from him
without a word tho inruppnnce
thul represents tho cost. There
Is no HUUKcstlon of charity
just pleasant little courtesy
from one person to another.
It s rea v amazing how many
decent pcoplo thcro are In the
world.
IT breaks on you suddenly that
In Knglund, whoro the casual
ty HATE has been os high os
anywhere, you see few legless
and armless men, whereas In
Germany you have been seeing
thorn bv the hundreds.
Britain Is among the VIC
TORS. Her life goes on In an
orderly way, with tho time and
tho facilities for dealing In a
modern, humane way with these
who havo paid tho terrible price
that war exacts from so many
but not from all.
Germany Is a VANQUISHED
nation, whose complete economy
lias bc-en unset by DEFEAT.
There has been no time In the
hours of downfall to provide the
LATER German legless ana arm
less with artificial limbs and
give them tho necessary physical
re-caucaiion.
REALIZATION of this fact,
nlus all the other shattering,
disintegrating evidences of the
consequences of DErtAl you
have been seeing in Germany,
leaves you with the grim, per
sonal determination that In the
future, whatever comes, Amer
ica must be kept STRONG so
that there shall be NO possibil
ity EVER that wo may be among
tho DKFEATfiu peoples.
VITAL STATISTICS
OUBTAFSON Horn t llllltlda hos
pital, Kiamain raiie, un.. wpirmwr svt
lots, to Mr. and Mr. Phillip Gtmafaon.
Hos Delta, a boy. Weight: 7 pound 13
ounce.
ROUE Horn at IlllUlda noapltat,
Klamath Fell. Ore.. September 38, IfHA,
to Mr, and Mr. Htaven Rom, Room vet t
apartment, a girl. Weight; pounds
13 ounce.
ROWKIX Bent at HllUlrte hospital.
Klamath rail. Ore., September 30, 1&43,
to Mr. and Mr. Theodore Rowell,
Main, a boy. weight; b pounas ounce.
llEKIl rinrn at !! ill tide hoenltal,
Klamath Fall. Ore.. September 30. 1043,
to Mr. and Mrs. Artnur Heea, ur
rhard. boy. Weight T pounds la
ounrei.
HARRIS Born t HMUMe hospital,
Klamath Fall. Ore., October 1, 10U,
in Mr and Mra. Uaoree Haiti. Tule-
lake. Calif., a girl. Weight: pounds
la ounce.
Hins Norland Fir Insurance,
Phono 6060.
eet hurt?
Tomi.nl.il by bUttm, itch
burning dryntfi or cnclwd
kin? ln(or not rUilnol
Soapfoot balh. Feci Ilk. dcw
m lumild, foamy Uihr com
forts your tortured Im,
Then .mooth iptci.Hrm.di
cawd Rnlnol on tb. lrrltul
spots, for lingering rHt
SoMM.U.'rauna
RESINDl
onrfREUT
SOAP
MUSTS
I!
(Contlnuod from Page One)
bargaining rights for tho typo of
work taken.
Union leaders here suld thut
many requests for potato pickers
hud been received from farmers
whn also asked for men to work
at other Jobs connected with the
potato harvest.
Thrco operations in Klamath
Falls aro down because oi me in
dustrv-wldo AFL, strlko for high.
or wages und 43U men uro iuic
hero.
SEATTLE. Oct. 1 W1 Immo.
diute withdrawal of pickets
from 10 CIO operations in the
Aberdeen district was ordered
today by Kenneth Nazer, prcsi.
dent of AFL Lumber and Saw.
mill Workers union local 3000
after ho was served with an ln
Junction.
rno temporary injunction pre
venting Interference with the
oncrations was served on tho un
ion president ly sncrui . mikc
Kllgoro at H:3u a. m. 11 was ob
talncd bv Ernest Smith, orcsl
dent of the ClO-Intcrnalional
Woodworkers of America local
at Aberdeen.
LIQUOR RATI OFF;
E
Outside of routine flrl-oMhc
month business, little change
was observed at the Green
Front store on S. 5lh as liquor
rationing was lifted in Oregon
today.
Some early birds, waiting for
the liquor store to open Mon
day, proferrcd their permits and
were pleasantly surprised when
tncy were told thai tho ration
Ing program had been lifted
and permits would no longer be
punched.
State stores were, however.
limiting buyers to one bottle at
time to assure distribution
to alt comers. Lcs Wright,
Klamath Falls manager, said
Monday that blends would bo
sold any hour the storo was
open, but Scotch and straight
whiskey would be on sale at
5:30 p. m. Monday, Wednesday
and Friday; 12:30 p. m. Tues
day, Thursday and Saturday.
The program now will pro
ceed on the basis that liquor
will bo sold until the quota for
the day is exhausted in the case
of Scotch and straight. Wright
said he had been limited to 20
bottles of bonded per day for
this week, and that there was
quite a supply of straight on
hand and that blend was plena-
lui.
See How . FR
If
I
SPUD HARVEST
Save Costly;Auto Repairs
iTITHY does your car need an oil filter?
L V V Well, one look at a used filter cartridge
fr.v. with its masses of dirt, grit and carbon, its
gobs of sticky sludge . . . will show you how
Fram filters save costly repairs, add miles to the
life of your car. Because if these impurities were
not trapped within an oil filter, they would be
In vour motor. ' ffrlndins awav movinir Darts.
clogging oil channels, causing
, motor trouble.
How's Your OH riltart"
But with a Fram oil filter .
Fram Replacement Cartridge
filter . . . dirt, grit, carbon
filtered out and oil is kept visually clean. So
visit your 'service station today. Have them
tUY MORE tONDS ...
KEEP THE tONDS YOU HAVE I
decnf turvsyt of thousands of ears showscf ffiof ovsr 50 were operafina wilfi efirfy;
harmful oil. Better find ouf, 'How's your oil DlhrV The Dipificlt faffs the sfory I
Shutdown Hits
16 Texas Towns,
25,000 People
(Continued from Pago One)
service employes m New York
City whoso return to work per
mitted 1, 500,000 other persons
to resume their occupations; and
S000 employes of tho Colorado
Fuel and Iron Minncu.ua Steel
plant, 1800 AFL carpenters In
tho Knoxvilic, 'ienn. area wno
decided to present to tho na
tional labor rolutlons board
their request for a wngo in
crease from 61.30 to $1.40 hour
ly. Threatened Some 2200 oil
workers at tho Union Oil com
pany plants at Oleum and Wil
mington. Calif.: eight locals of
the CIO oil workers union in
the Allegheny volley of Penn
sylvania; 1500 United farm
equipment workers members
in tho Peoria, mi. plant oi tne
Cutcrplllor Tractor company,
and 200,000 telephone workers.
Continuing 35,000 oil work
ers In refineries throughout the
nation; 05,000 wood and lum
ber workers in a half-dozen
states; 100,000 automotive
workers, principally in tho De
troit area; 4u,uuu miners, most
ly In Pennsylvania and West
Virginia; and 50,000 textile
workers, largely In the New
ark, N. J. area.
STILL FOR TIME
(Continued from Page One)
China, and some gold set aside
for the federal reserve bank of
marked for Siam and Indo
North China were reported
found In the Bank of Japan.
The hunt for the missing (unds
that once belonged to the Phil
ippines, China and other nations
began with a conference of
Colonel Kramer and Viscount
Keizo Shlbusawa, governor of
the Bank of Japan, and other
leading Japanese financial fig
ures. The Japanese denied that the
Bank of Japan held any foreign
money, denied any knowledge
of a possible hiding place, and
maintained they had no control
over financial activities of field
military commanders.
The militarists, the bankers
said, had the power to cither sell
their looted assets and place the
money in a special disbursement
fund of the finance ministry, or
"keen the assets for themselves."
Shlbusawa declared he knew
nothing of reported transfers of
gold and currency irom the Phil
ippines to Japan.
The bankers gave Colonel
Kramer an estimate of the gold
reserves oi tne Bank oi Japan
which they said was Japan's
total reserve except for small
amounts earmarked for ship
ment to, lnao-umna und siam,
but the figure was not disclosed
Immediately.
Kramer previously had an
nounced that the finance minis
try estimated Japan's gold re
serve at $125,000,000.
AM I Oil Filter's
make the 30SecOnd'Fram Dipstick TestT "The;
Dipstick tells the
look clean. But
you need Fram
and help keep
service station
Fram Dipstick
FRAM CORPORATION, Provldantajj?, R. I.
breakdowns and-
.". or a Genuine
in your present
and sludge are
CMC ondcfidtbt Cfouuto
BUS DRIVERS
GQ 0 N STRIKE:
LI
(Continued from Page One)
negotiations for new contracts.
The change was made after can
collation of the 35-mile-an-hour
speed limit, under which drivers
were compensated for extra time
required for their runs.
Servlc. Halttd
The strike halted all stage
service from here to Salt Lake
City, Pendleton, Bend, and in
termediate runs. Routes to
Spokane and other northwest
cities were also affected, but
travelers could obtain transpor
tation on other bus systems
serving the same area.
Harold Oathes, AFL business
agent, said the old wage rates
would mean a reduction of as
much as $2 a day for some driv
ers. Even though future con
tracts are made retroactive, he
said, drivers were unwilling to
work for lower pay during pos
sible long drawn out negotia
tions.
R. J. Walsh, Omaha, Neb.,
K resident of the Overland Grey
ound, said today the strike of
drivers halted service on four
trips between Portland and Salt
Lake City and about 30 runs in
intermediate service. Service
between Spokane and Pendleton,
Ore., was also tied up, affecting
about 1500 passengers dally on
that link.
Ask Pay Incr.ai.
Walsh said the drivers were
asking in their future contract
increases of 36 to 80 per cent
YOU DONT
NEED CASH
AT Seors-USE v
PURCHASE
COUPONS
Ton t to tht Cre'eftt Offle
jiut ofic to et a book full
of eoupooi . . . thei yoa
spend the ooipooi jurt 11k
cah all through tht ttorr.
Tbere'i ao fun or formit
Ht, m In in i tales altpt.
Small doo payment and
monthly -repaymcaU, VtuaJ
afjlng tin -
GET YOURS TODAY AT
Your SEARS CREDIT Offset
story." If oil is clean, it willj
if your oil is dirty, you'll know
protection. Save big repair bllltj
your motor young. Visit your
and have them make the free
Test, v'" ' v
St XVK
above present rates. The union
demand Is for ,061 cents a mile.
Wartime rates were .0361 to
.0571 t mile, and the wages re
stored today were ,0361 to .0473
a mile. '
On Pacific Trallways, drivers
who have been receiving .0470
were cut to .0375 a mile, the
union said.
Walsh reported the drivers
gave notice of their strike here
when regular drivers failed to
report for a Portland to Salt
Lake run scheduled to leave here
at 11:50 p. m. last night.
W. W. Lafollette, Pocatello,
chairman of division 1055 of tho
Motor Coach Employes of Amer
ica, had issued orders earlier
that drivers were not to report
for work effective at 12:01 a. m.
today and to remain away until
notified by their union local
chairmen.
Hil.d Offer
Walsh issued a statement here
In which he said the company
had ordered pre-35-mile-an-hour
mileage rates effective today
while the new contract was be
ing negotiated. He said the
company volunteered to make
any increases retroactive from
October 1, but the union had re
jected the offer.
Union Business Agent Harold
Oathes said the drivers believed
the company should pay the
war-time slow down mileage
rate while the contract negotia
tions were In progress.
Available Service
The shutdown forced travelers
to Pendleton and Salt Lake City
to postpone journeys or turn to
CONSULT
May Morgan
NATIONALLY FAMOUS CORSETIERE
Who Will Be In Our Corset Deportment
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
Enjoy the action-free comfort ond support of
scientifically designed foundation competently fitted
to your figure by Miss Morgan. No charge for ,
consultation.
SEARS' CELEBRATED.
"Tf SCIENTIFIC 5iV V
SUPPORT - Ma I
Gale slenderizes . , . Improve- your
posture ... gives you poise!
Scientifically designed to sup
port the body, help relieve
backache, and achieve grace
ful, erect carriage. The mod- '
el Illustrated, of tine, pre
hrunk rayon striped
eoutll, Is styled tor effec
tive thigh control. Clus
ter control lacing and
separate back lacer
make adjustment
easy. Tearose.
RmUiuI Shrlnkas. tt
ppert Ilk. stnMV
llftlna hand.. ,
Monday. Oct. 1, 1945
train transportation. Bus serv
ice to Spokane, however, was
-IN
V'
ITS Him ITS DIFFERENT!
Mia-ni-ml Crisp, gold. flakes plus
Uaty raisim both in the tame
package I Flake, made of the finest
of t white winter wheat. Stay crisper
longer in milk. Added to delicious
whole-grain nourishment are
Pinto Crtifsrnii sMdtas ralsfas
vine-ripe taste-treats) Nuggets of
goodnesa. Try keixooo's raisin
40 bran flakes for double enjoy.
iiSmLANOFkHJITiNmSAMpACMGt
S) n
f . lmZL. oK date
mauMm-'--:-
tmmm i i i
Htlpa you t .
Wrd, wff
ally laUaaa.
an i
Ladies' Aid
Achieve t lovelier fignreN
in Chirmodc brs and
Nu-Bsck girdlel The bra .
besutiully control full '
bustsi No-Back girdles
won't ride apr' Flexible
V
elastic ptnels.. 16-inch
length. Bras 34 to 44.
' Girdles 28 to 40. '
Any Purchase of $10 or
More May Be Made On ,
Sears Easy Payment Plan
HERALD AND NEWS THREE
still available on another stage
system.
THE SAME PACKAGE!
mentl It's rich In Iron. Naturally
sweet. Saves sugar. Give your family
flavor they'll go for with vim I , '
MAY MORGAN
' kUrti mw tiihl
Milinwila,
169.
the Bra
the Clrdls
w&
133 So. Ith
Phone SIM