'OUR HERALD AND NEWS
Thursday, Novembtr 1. 194S
FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM EPLEY
Editor Managing Editor
temporary combination of th Bvaning Herald and tlit
Clamalh New. Publiihed every afternoon except bunday
it Knlnd0 and Pine atreeU, Klamath Falls. Oregon, by th
(tore fa" Publlahlnf Ca and the Newa Publishing Company,
Member,
Associated PrMt
t Member Audit
: Bureau Circulation
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
number of occasions, at
a number or occasions, at war bond
meetings and elsewhere, some one has re-
ferred to Klamath bond buyers as "champions."
Is that pleasant guff, or Is
there something to it?
A look at the record shows
that Klamath county has done
Its part In helping make Ore
gon the champion E bond
buying state in the nation, and
that Klamath, in its class, is
the champion bond buying
county of Oregon.
Total sales of all war bond
Issues In Oregon from Dec. 7,
1941, to October 1, 1943, was
1,378.055,973, or $1215.67
per capita.
Of these totals, E bonds aggregated
335,978, and the Oregon per capita
EPLEY
$492,-
E bond
figure of $434.95 TOPPED THE NATION.
Orcgonians do have something to crow ah,out.
Where Klamath Shines
IN reviewing the amazing Oregon record this
week, the Oregon Voter, Portland political
weekly, makes this mention of Klamath county:
"Among the more populous counties of the
state, those credited with more than 40,000
population each (other than Multnomah), Klam
ath topped the list in per capita E bond sales
and per capita sales of all issues."
. That's what gives Klamath county champion
ship status.
In the whole war bond buying period, Klam-
J.ath purchased $13,179,069 in E bonds.
The per capita E bond sales in this county
was $328.39.
Sales of all issues in this county hit the
notable' high of $31,144,124, or a per capita
of $753.73.
These are figures that may well swell Klam
ath's breasts with pride. Certainly, we can't
let down now, ' and spoil that grand record.
The Victory Loan drive, now getting under way,
affords opportunity to finish this .business off
with high honor.
Laurels To Sherman '
LITTLE SHERMAN, which knows that war
is bell and has to be paid for, leads all
Oregon counties in E bond buying.
Sherman's per capita is $833.50.
We take real pride in the record of our im
mediate neighbor on the east, Lake county.
It had a per capita of E bond sales of $461.32,
ranking sixth in the state.
Among more populous counties, Klamath was
first and second was Marion. Our neighbor on
the west, Jackson, is well down the list, with
$253.36 per capita of E bond sales. Lane, on
our northwest, had a per capita in E bonds of
$262.70.
Multnomah , county, Oregon's big county
which naturally draws economically upon the
rest of the state, did itself proud in the bond
campaigns.
Multnomah's E bond per capita was $571.34,
second in the whole state, while per capita
sale of all issues, $1945.38, led the state.
The Victory Loan
OREGON'S bond-buying record speaks well
for the patriotism and prosperity of its
people.
The Victory Loan, however, may not prove so
easy as have the other bond drives. The war
psychology that helped to put over the other '
campaigns is now past. Industrial activity has
diminished to some extent with the end of
pressure for ships and materials for carrying
on the fight.
But the Victory Loan quotas are not so large
as were some of the war loan quotas. We think
Oregon and Klamath county will make it, with
something to spare.
t
5
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6
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 The British are
more than our best friends in this none
too friendly world.
They are in a way our grandparents grand
parents who have fallen upon hard times. But
they have put over some amazing stunts on
us, always doing it in a half-hurt, half-superior
sort of way, as if they had a right to our gold
eye-teeth or the world's oyster.
Anyone who says walt-a-minute-lets-see-what-.
is-going-on-here, they look upon with their in
jured air as if he were just too backward to
understand, or worse, possibly anti-British. You
never know whether to laugh at their obvious
ness, or get angry at thejr imposition upon
your intelligence.
Not the least of their offenses for their own
business interests against the world is what
they have done in Assam, Malay theater, where
native insurrections are top news. You may
not believe these insldo facts, but I have them
by direct, objective, provable written pipeline,
and would not present them if they were not
true beyond successful contradiction, to-wlt:
Naked And Hungry
ALTHOUGH' the natives are naked, hungry
and ill the British have succeeded in im
posing upon our armed forces an officially
ordered restriction against leaving anything be
hind of benefit to the natives.
Our hospitals will have to be razed to the
ground, unless the British take them over for
themselves. The medical supplies and equip
ment which the natives need so much already
are being subjected to the same foolish dis
position. Believe it or not, the sun glasses of our air
corps men were collected as they departed for
the states, and taken out to the air strip where
a steam roller was run over them. They were
expensive government properly oi uie i.ou
type.
Again, 6000 ordnance wrist watches were
destroyed within a two weeks' period by MP's.
Our men were not permitted to purchase them,
but if they lost one, they had to pay the pur
chase price.
Our soldiers were told the government had
overbought airmen's Swiss watches during the
war to keep the Swiss watchmakers from mak
ing precision instruments for the nazis, and all
this surplus must be destroyed as government
property and cannot be given to the natives
or brought home for use by our men.
Three auto vehicles were stalled at a mission
ary rest camp due to the monsoon. The mis
sionaries asked to buy them for the mission.
Instead an officer was sent out with three
sticks of TNT and destroyed them to prevent
anyone from using them.
,
Drugs Buried
CHEMICALS and drugs are buried in the
ground for destruction when no longer
of use to us and surgical instruments are sys
tematically ruined in a government dump pre
pared for that purpose. Appeals for use of "the
drugs in mission hospitals were unavailing.
Want some more? In India all electric cur
rent is AC, but all our equipment is DC. Our
generators, fans, refrigerators, radios and X-ray
equipment are being destroyed by us DC gen
erators decimated by 14 pound sledgehammers.
The British will not furnish DC current, and
will not allow us to leave our generators to
the needy . natives. They will have to "buy
British," or else and it must be else because
they have no money.
Our American pay standard to the natives
had to be lowered at the request of the British.
Even so we paid a top of about 33 cents a day
for the best Indians around hospitals. This will
be lowered to eight cents a day when we leave,
and the natives are pleading with our men to
bring them to the States. We introduced them
to combs, mirrors, shaving creams, soaps, towels
and decent clothing, which they will have no
SIDE GLANCES
'
t tl-t
tout mi rr m stavici. wee T. w. . u, a. ear, em
"He might be the toughest guy in school, but I hnd the
last word notice how he backed down when I said
40b. yeah'!"
more.
Burma conditions are customarily described
among GI's as CBI confusion beyond imagina
tion. The medics are screaming to get home
because they have nothing to do, as the 1000-
hed hosnital in one locality has only -285'
patients. But the army still carries it as a
1000-bed hospital and therefore must need
lessly keep a staff there equal to "its full as
sumption. Morale Not High
FIVE troop ships came into Calcutta to take
troops back to the States, six weeks or so
back, but no troops were permitted to go on
them. So' much of a fuss was raised, one
officer lost his job. We are getting the men
out now, 24,000 being scheduled to leave during
October, but 6000 had to wait another month
until they acquired more points. Morale is not
what you would call high.
The basic British impositions certainly laugh
at the four freedoms. Shades of a quart of milk
a day! We cannot even leave our hospitals,
give medical supplies or leftover lighting or
radios to the needy. We cannot give them our
sunglasses or watches; indeed we cannot carry
these home ourselves.
I hear one American officer did permit dis
position slyly of some of 'our worn-out army
clothing to a few naked natives, dui i nesiiaie
to report this sensible kindness. lor lear ne
'might be punished.
I was sitting in a restaurant eating dinner
the night I heard the radio flash about the war
declaration by revolutionaries in the Burma
India area, the first of new wars before the
breath of the old one died. My companions
suggested the communists might be financing
opposition to the British there. I decided to in
vestigate what was behind the matter. I found
the British themselves apparently responsible
rather than the commies our crochety, self
interested grandparents who are dead set in
their colonial and commercial ways.
The World
Today
By J. M. ROBERTS, JR.
(Substituting for MacKenxie)
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
Mackenzie
Telling
The Editor
Letter printed here mutt not be more
than 6(Ki words in length, must be writ
ten liRibljr on ONE BIOS of the paper
only, and must be ttgnsd. Contributions
following thess rules, ars warmly welcomed.
PLUG FOR KLAMATH
MARIGNANI, France (To the
Editor) -I'm stationed here in an
engineering depot outside of
Marseille about 20 miles, at the
fot of St. Victorette staging area,
toot of St. Victorette staging area,
every time they change shows
and the nthor nlrM In a no,,,.
j reel short I happened to see some
I film that was music to my eyes.
It was about C. V. Barton's black
J ana wnne ranch. Then a couple
of nights later it had another one
on his taming of a coyote. I
happened to mention to a couple
of my buddies that I lived close
to his place and they started ask
ing questions about the country
around there. I told them what
I knew about the country, being
as how I have lived all my life
in jviamatn county,
I got to thinking we ought to
have more of them in the news-
rcei to snow off what we have.
Some of the people can't believe
it when you tell them about
Crater lake, : harvesting the po-
iaiu mm grain crops, tne aDuna
ance of ducks and.eeese on Low.
er Klamath lake during the hunt
ing season, tne method we use
of storing potatoes and sorting
them, and the deer hunting we
have around Bly and above Fort
ruamatn.
RED-ITCHY-SCALY
.EQER9A
.Doctor's 'Invisible' Liquid
Promptly Relieves Torture!
Firat applications of wonderful toothing
medicated Zemoa dootor'a formula
promptly relieve the itchini and burn-
ing and also holn hnsl I lm rail a-IubLI
Amatingly successful for over 85 yoarel
tint trial of Zemo convinceal Intitibl
doosn't ahow on akin.
All drug atonw. In Seize. rMQ
Relief At Last
ForYourCough
CreomnWon relieves promptly be-
b ngni to tne seat oi tne
helD loosen and rl
Bonn laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw. tender, in.
named bronchial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to seU you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Cough j.Cheit Colds, Bronchltfi
I know that if some of the
other men in service happened
to see some of them that thev
wouldn't be afraid to say, "that
is part oi my home county." So
what say we get in and plug
more of them. They are the best
way oi advertisement we have
and now that the war is over a
lew tourists would do us good.
Yours truly,
T4 Claire H. Duncan.
HOLD CONVENTION
PORTLAND. Nov. 1 UP)
The Oregon State Hotel associa
tion win hold its annual conven
tion here Dec, 9-11.
Classified Aas Bring Results
Relieve that Tormenting
PINW0RI..
ITCH
It is strange, coincidence
which brings simultaneous pub
lication of the tsenhower-Tru-
iiiuit pian ior
early establish
ment of an al
1 i e d civilian
g overnment
for Germany
and the gener
al's official re
port for Sep
tember that
unrest among
the Germans
has approach
ed the point of
organized re-
(Press dispatches Indicate no
improvement in the latter since
the period covered by the re
port). .. ..
Although the two situations
have developed independently
and were made public without
cross-references, they would
seem to be Inextricably linked.
Muddled Situation
Offhtmd it appears that in-
traduction of another govern
mental factor between the lev
els of high policy-making and
the application of that policy,
which obviously must remain a
military job, could only further
complicate an already muddled
situation.
Eisenhower's report on occu
pation conditions (as distin
guished from his letter advocat
ing establishment oi civil gov
ernment by June) serves to sol
idify previous indications that
the four-power control setup in
Berlin is running into serious
difficulties. It falls to clarity
the improvements to be expect
ed from a group oi civilians
who. unlike the present control
council members, would not
even be bound together through
having participated in a com
mon war.
Irked With Situation
Since Eisenhower makes It
clear that the army will have
to remain in occupation for a
long time, and since it is now
charged with both police work
and organization of civilian af
fairs, he might desire a clear-
cut division between the two.
He obviously is irked with the
situation in the Berlin control
council. He as much as says that
he has been giving in for the
sake of unity when caught in
the minority, but that the others
have not. He has had several
years now of being forced to
weave political factors into his
approach to military objectives.
He could hardly be blamed if
he feels a little tired of it all
and would prefer the relative
simplicity of strictly military
duties.
Yet Eisenhower is hardly the
man to agree with any policy
wnicn mignt endanger the ulti
mate accomplishment of what
the army fought for. He must
feel that Germany can best be
started back-on the road to self-
Too Embarrassing
to Talk About!
ft If no longer neeeesary to pot op with
the trouble caused br Fln-Worma t
A hlahlr effective war to deal with thla
vglr Infection haa now been made possible.
It la baaed on the medically reeoitnlted
tiros? known an crentlan violet. This SDeelal
drug la the vital Ingredient In P-W, the
I'in-worm tablets developed In tne laboriu
lories of Dr. D. Jayne ft Son.
The small, ensy-to-take PW tablets act
In a SDccial way to remove Pin-Worms. So
don't take ehances with the embarrassing
rectal Itch and other distress caused by
these creatures that live and grow Inside
the human body. 11 you suspect Fln-Worma
In mnr child or yourself, vet a box of
JAYNI'S r-W right away and follow the
directions, natlsfactlon guaranteed or your
money back.
Tour druggist koowfi P-W for Pin-Worms I
African j
nk niFflRFr il
government through early civil
ian control, and that tho advan
tages of such a program out
weigh the complications which
are bound to arise. But whether 1 ber report.
From the Klamath Republican
October 2S, 1805
The town council dccldod last
night to have loose rocks on
Main stroot picked up and
huulod away.
Klnmath Falls business men
ought to look Into the fact that
a lot of Indians go to Modford
for supplies. Local people, havo
been overlooking the Indian
trade.
From the Evemlnjr Herald
November 1, 1935
With tho volume of tho crop
cut. Klamath uotnto nrlces have
stiffened. Jubilant In r mora re
ported they had received offers
as high as $1.10 for Klamath
Gems.
Wintry weather
here today.
continued
SALES JUMP
PORTLAND, Nov. 1 (VP)
Abandonment of shoe rationing
caused a 20 to SO pcrcont jump
in sales, Portland shoe retailers
reported today.
tho objectives of tho goneral's
letter to the president can be
attained would seem to depend
largely on now wen ne can
clear up. between now and
j June, tho matters in his Septem-
I1EK0IK
By GEORGE PALMER
JERUSALEM, , Nov. 1 (ZD-
Four persons were killed tind at
least 10 injured us Jawlxh-Arab
political dlfforencot led to a now
outbreak of disorders today dur
ing which systomatia ' attacks
were made on railway communi
cations throughout Palestine.
- British military headquurtors
announced that Palestine rail
lines wero cut In about 00
places,
A British military commun
ique attributed the attacks to
J own. Blame was not Immedi
ately attached to any specific
group, but an exhaustive police
and military Investigation was
underway all over Palestine.
Police captured five armad
Jews following the holdup of a
train between Jerusalem and
Lyddn.
Police launches In Haifa and
Jaffa harbors blow up from
mines at 2 a. m. One sunk and
two others were seriously dam
aged.
A mysterious explosion which
rocked Jeruaalem shortly be
fore midnight was believed to
novo boon the result of an attack
upon the railroad.
Urltlsh military sources said
casualties Included ono British
soltllor killed and another
wounded: ono Palestine police
man killed and one wounded;
two Pulostlne railway workers
killed, and six otlir.ru wounded,
one of them critically.
Btrombero-Carlaon
Derby's Muilc Co.
Radios.
Radio Programs
lC II Mutual-Don Lea
ilrOI 1240 ke.
Thuri. Evening, Nov. 1, 1845
SiW r, in. (labrlsl
(till Itr
Newa
till Kin net
Hence
lilt Slarllalil tar.
suede
Tint Klh.l smllh
Trie
lilt Victory I.saa
lilt asd Hydsr
tit It I I a
llruminend
liia Nsaaa'a aal.
lery
it lllsnn llatdr,
News
lit M a Millet,
News
J Calendar sf
Muslo
till Dance Temps
lOiOt Nswe stouna.
oilo
Friday, Nov. 2, 1945
a. m. Wake- I ItiOO si I a a I.
tip Tunes sue Mslsdlse
isiio nsws
lliiu raur Dance
Tunes
tilts farm rre.,1
snd Marks!
Mstarls
liOO fisnk Hem
, newer,
Nsws
liia simile Time
1.11 Headline
Nsws
Ills Heel (lurs
llOO Island MIL
eilles
lilt r a a k I a n
riaehss
lllO Take II fair
Time
lit! rsiielar lilts
tiOO William
l.snt. News
tilt M e r I e a
Dswnsy
tilt at a r n I o
Msllnee
till Variety Re-
vae
llioo Ciena Iterdy,
News
Itilt tsmslhlng Is
Tele aduui
lOilt Manias-
I a t a m
M a a n-Islneers
Hill Colli
lllulslares
IliOt D I a k and
Jeamtls
lllll Calender el
Rlualc
1 1 110 0,ueen V er
A Day
f m. Harry
Harden O r
liot
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I HO A 1 1 e r n dos
Muslvala
tlOO Muslo Thai
e Maarklss
lilt V a u rick
'Kaa
till l.ecal N a w e
and T a w
Tapirs
Ills Oil If It.
wards
IrOt Dr. I
Tsiai
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lilt Tsa Time
ana Klea
la Msswslt
Ilea Lewis, J
llOO full
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Nsws
lilt I i i h I s r
Jshaeen "
till K I a m a I k
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till ItupermsM
tilO Ce pi. Mid.
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LAST C MM LAST CMIL!
WILL POSJTIVELY CLOSE FOREVER
jmRDAV
GOT
We Have Been Closed All Day Today Slashing Prices To The Bone
You'll Be Amazed At The Low Prices We Have Regrouped And Rear
ranged We Are All Set Now Come And Get Your Share Of These
Sacrifice Bargains Doors Open At 9:00 A. M. Friday Morning
No Exchanges No Refunds -All Sales Final
WOMEN'S
DRESS SHOES
200 Pairs
, These are in greens, rtdt and whites
Good sis range Pumps and sandals
In many versions. You'll have to hurry
for theste
4
Tha art play, and casual
shots, alto tome drtat shoe!
in lot. Price has been slashed
to way balow coat. Buy sev
eral pairs at this low price,
$1100
Ration Free :
NO STAMP NEEDED
60
COTTON
DRESSES
Her is really something. 60 only,
better cotton dretiet drastically re
duced to a price below that of a choap
cotton houte drett. You'll have to tee
thete to fully appreciate their worth.
Hurry for theitl
18 Play Suits
Cotton crinkle ertpe play
tuits with matching tklrtt.
Nice patterns and colors
We completely forgot the cost
when we marked thtte down
to only
$4100
f2
ANKLETS
Cotton merceristd anklttt
Cuff tops in white and pattel
shades, Sists 7 to 10 M. Real
values at only
29
00
BLOUSES
Only 40 bloutes In this lot.
Some are slightly lolled and
mutted. Most all sistt in
whites and colors. Drastical
ly xeducad to only
1
00
WOMEN'S
ALL SHOES - - - RATION FREE !
150 Pairs
PLAY
SHOES
DRESS SHOES
300 Pairs
Thtte are amasing valuai solid
leathtr in many stylet. Blacks, brownt
and tome high colon. Slitt 4 to 9 and
wldtht are AAAA to Bav You'll want
Pl at this SACRIFICE
PRICE.
NO STAMP NEEDED
18
BETTER
DRESSES
Croptt and noytlty rnyoni, Several
fall colon. Thete have been drattlcally
reduced to inture immediate dlipoiaU
Thtie will more out quick at only
$FjOO
F0ULGERfS'JfflNEX