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The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California • Page 2

Location:
San Bernardino, California
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ATTACKS OF BRONCHIAL ASTHMA AND HAY FEVER Readily Respond to B. T. FORMULA Satisfaction Guaranteed DARRAH'S PHARMACY Corner Fifth and San Bdno. PAINTS witness replied: "What is the purpose of that question to embarrass someone? No, I won't answer that It's none of your business." Later Whitney told Aronson: "I'll match my service on rail roads with yours anytime." Whitney had charged in previous testimony before an emergency board of the national railway panel that the railroads by holding train crews until ireight trains "are loaded to the last pound," were wasting man power. G.

L. Jennings, Watsonville, California, chairman of the broth erhood, who followed Whitney on the stand, read a detailed state' ment saving that the yards are the "hub and heart of the railroads," and that the war has doubled the work of yardmen and switchmen. Milk Rationing in South Seen; Labor, Feed Said Lacking LOS ANGELES, June 21 UP) Milk rationing must be adopted in Southern California unless man power and protein feed shortages are relieved promptly, producers and distributors agreed today. A conference presided over by E. L.

Vehlow, milk marketing expert of the state department of ag riculture, advocated formulation of a concrete program to be pre sented to state and federal authorities. Vehlow pointed out that although milk production in California is up 48 per cent from two years ago, there still is not enough for civilian needs, due to military demands. Youth Killed in Fall From Roller Coaster LONG BEACH, June 21 (TP) Police today described the death of Robert Lacerte, 15, San Pedro, as accidental after the youth fell 18 feet from a speeding roller coaster at a local amusement park. Basic Magnesium Wage Increases Approved SAN FRANCISCO, June 21 UP) The regional war labor board announced today wage increases of from to 20 cents an hour had been approved for between 300 and 400 employes of Basic Magnesium, at Las Vegas, Nev. 'up tun Weoerf Without Surgtry No hoapiu.1, needleea pain or Ucm oft work.

Quick reeulte, low coat Liberal term. We hare healed your neighbor! by the acorea. Talk to them. Examination and consultation free. Fine, llluatrated book free.

Write, call or phone Ban Bernardino 673 -0T for your free copy. Office hours on Tuesdays only 1 to I p.m. DRS. REINECKI COUTURIER OitMMthK PhjrilelM Phyilclan-Surgwe SAN BERNARDINO 107 1 7th ST. Us AngalM Office 2030 Wllihlre Siva1.

ffi I 55 Marshall spoke on the same platform with Joseph E. Davies, former ambassador to Russia, who denounced criticism of the Soviet as playing "Hitler's game" and declared that resistance of the red army "saved our civilization." SLANDER DEPLORED At the same time Marshall de plored some processes of democracy which permitted a recent attack, a "vicious slander," upon the women's auxiliary army corps. He said he sometimes felt "dis couraged by the democratic processes" for which we are fighting when it permits a "most atro cious, if not subversive, attack be ing directed against an organization of the army." Marshall cautioned against over- exaggeration of air power triumphs, asserting that the enemy might be hammered to his knees through air power, but the ground forces would deliver the knockout blow. JTo I Page 2 MM BERNARDINO DAILY SUN Tuesday, June 22, 1943 Nation's War Effort Threatened by Lack of Dire ction, Warn Senators Report Spares None in Failure On Home Front 'Business as Usual' Attitude Condemned In Committee Report WASHINGTON, June 21 (TP) A senate military affairs subcommittee warned tonight that the unity of the nation war effort is eriously threatened by lack of firm, centralized direction and failure to mobilize all resources. It called for prompt corrective action because civilian morale and the home front effort have sagged "dangerously." In a report that pulled no punch' the committee said the truth of the matter is that the home front has not yet gone all-out for war and implied that unless it does so quickly the allies may lose the in itiative.

"Only all-out production will unify the whole nation," it said. To accomplish this, a vigorous policy of programing, scheduling and actively directing the war agencies in the performance of their mutually dependent programs must be put into effect Unified direction of the home front is a primary need in order to support our military forces, which are mobilized and hold the initiative on all rfonts." NO ONE SPARED The report spares no one government, business, or labor and asserted that "business as usual" attitudes among those groups "have been and are retarding war production." The report was made by Chairman Harley M. Kilgore, West Virginia Democrat, and his four Democratic colleagues on the committeeSenators Elbert D. Thomas, Utah; Edwin C. Johnson, Colorado; Mon C.

Walgren, Washington, and James E. Murray, Montana. Symptoms of the "deepened crisis" on the home front were listed as "recurring strikes" and failure to attack the root the "wrangling jmpeting govern-: ale black markets and various items continue to iivrish; and "unwarranted attacks from divisive forces who for selfish ends are willing to risk precipitation of an internal crisis at a time when our armed forces are mobilized for a decisive offensive." UP TO BYRNES It said that creation of the office of war mobilization is the first itep toward lifting the nation from the present crisis. Whether this will be more than a first step is largely the responsibility of O.W.M. Director James F.

Byrnes and his associates, it said, adding that they must utilize the full power given them to achieve complete mobilization of the nation's resources or join their predecessor agencies in failure. The committee listed three broad areas in which lack of policy and direction are critical production, man power and economic stabilization and said the immediate jobs in these fields are to: 1. Increases war production and balance it with the civilian economy. 2. Use man power more efficiently and intensively.

3. Stabilize the domestic Tommy Manville Plans To Take Seventh Bride NEW YORK, June 21 CLP) Right in the middle of the war and the nationwide coal strike, Tommy Manville announced today that he will take his seventh bride in just about the time it takes to establish a Nevada residence. The current favorite just half Tommy's age is 24-year-old Jane Weeks, honey-haired movie actress. There's only one hitch. Miss Weeks' California divorce from Edward Conne, Hollywood press agent, is not final until February.

Manville said, however, that he and Miss Weeks might hit the trail to Reno very soon and get married after her six weeks of residence necessary for a Nevada divorce. This Soil or' Conscience Must Have Hurt Him LOS ANGELES, June 21 (IP) Harold McNabb, 25-year-old ailor, wants none of the shore patrol. When two of the boys with the S. P. arm bands hailed him last night McNabb bolted and In his flight knocked over a water hydrant, causing a minor geyser.

He then went through a board fence, knocking himself out. He was treated today for bruises, abrasions and possible concussion. It was just a routine checkup, the patrolmen said. Whitney Defends Rail Experience Union Chief, Counsel For Carriers Clash NEW YORK, June 21 UP) A. F.

Whitney, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, defended his actual railroad experience in a verbal clash today with the general counsel for carriers opposing the 30 per cent wage increase demand of five railroad unions. Asked by Jacob Aronson, vice- presiderit of the New York Central system and carriers' counsel, whether Whitney's charge that the railroads were wasting man power and "destroying efficiency" was based on actual experience, the Call $52-91 "Mac" Tor Electrical Service E. L. McADAMS 371 Street Phone 552-11 Mobs Run Wild In Detroit; 23 Dead, 700 Hurt Army Curbs Rioters After 24 Hours of Bloody Street Fights (Continued From Page One) by the governor's order. All three counties of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb the so-called "metropol itan area" with more than 000 inhabitants were included.

Detroit is in Wayne county. In cluding its suburbs, it has residents. Fighting meanwhile continued. A crowd of about 3,000 milled about Cadillac square in down town Detroit before the city hall. Police seemed unable to keep control.

A number of beatings of Negroes by white persons were re ported. White mobsters set fire to the homes of two Negro families and in a fight on a streetcar a Negro slashed a white man. A gang of white men, seeking to take two Negroes from custody of police in a scout car, overturned the car and set it afire. The two Negroes and the police leaped to safety. The Negroes fled.

HUNDREDS ARRESTED The total of arrests tonight passed 600 as law enforcement officers sought desperately to bring the situation under control. One of the three white persons to die was a physician who was pulled from his car while trying to answer a call in the riot vicinity off Woodward avenue, one of the city's arteries. Shortly after issuing the proclamation, Kelly Informed the public by radio address of the imposition of a 10 p. m. curfew with all inhabitants to ba "off the streets" by that hour.

LIQUOR SALES BANNED All places of amusement were ordered to close at 9 p.m. and "remain closed until further orders." Sale of alcoholic beverages were prohibited. So also were pub lic assemblies. The governor also said that no persons except for "regular authorities" would be allowed to carry weapons. On Woodward avenue just north of the downtown business district this afternoon, youthful mobsters entered the rioting.

Tear gas was used In several Instances to break up groups. Today rioting, police agreed, was touched off by an isolated fist fight late last night on the bridge that connects Belle Isle, recreational and swimming center in the Detroit river, with the city. MOB SPIRIT SPREADS It spread swiftly, given impetus, some Negro leaders said, by an erroneous but widely-believed report that a Negro woman and child were slain on Belle Isle last night. Several lesser outbreaks of racial friction have occurred in recent months in war-crowded Detroit, the most prominent halting war production and making more than 20,000 idle in the Packard Motor Car Co. plant.

State troops were called to Detroit a year ago last spring when rioting was threatened over Negro occupancy of the Sojourner Truth housing project here. They moved the Negroes into the new quarters with out incident. MEN JYOMEII Are Needed By CRITICAL WAR ACTIVITY PRIMARY FLYING SCHOOL TRAINING ARMY CADETS FOR ARMY AIR FORCES PILOTS Experienced and Inexperienced Help Needed Those With Automobile Experience Should Be Able to Advance Rapidly TOP WAGES PAID TO BEGINNERS Write, Giving Age, Experience Availability Certificate Required Personnel Dept. TWENTYNINE PALMS AIR ACADEMY Twentynlne Palms, Calif. HEMORRHOIDS AND OTHER RECTAL TROUBLi Treated by DR.

P. Y. GASS ID I BermraiM Phtst 111-82 CORN BELT GOVERNORS CLASH WITH DEWEY ON FOOD ISSUE Warren Fights Return of Japs to Coast; Gen. Marshall Sees Clear Victory Pattern COLUMBUS, Ohio, June 21 (TP) A food and political controversy brewed tonight at the otherwise nonpartisan thirty-fifth annual governors' conference as corn belt chief executives clashed with Gov. Thomas E.

Dewey of New York. Dewey touched off the debate in the question period following his speech in which he said he advocated "immediately killing lit tle pigs so eastern cows can have feed. But eat the pigs don't plow them under." Governor Robert S. Kerr of Ok lahoma, a Democrat, said he did not know what Dewey wanted a "but his approach will get him neither votes nor corn In the middle west." WARREN FEARS SABOTAGE Other corn belt governors chal lenged Dewey's statement and agreed that solution of the feed problem for dairy cows would depend on enacting ceiling prices on an "elastic" basis to permit lifting to meet such crises. Governor Bourke B.

Hicken- looper of Iowa, a Republican, said he could not take issue with Dewey's problem of "feeding the eastern people," but he could not imagine midwestern farmers voluntarily will give up feeding corn which would disturb their whole "economic balance just to sell the grain." Governor Earl Warren of California provoked minor debate by declaring that release of 150,000 Japanese held at relocation centers might lead to widespread sabotage and "a second Pearl Harbor in California." He said that California would employ every legal means to prevent return of the Japanese to that state. Gen. George C. Marshall, army chief of staff, said in an address tonight that the allied nations had seized the initiative, "the most vital factor In war," and confidently predicted a clear pattern for victory. That pattern, he said, was coordinated leadership of allied action, an assemblage of overwhelming military air, land and sea power, and the explosive effect of skillful application of that power.

Attacks Pushed Against Italy People Again Urged To Demand Peace (Continued from Page One) allied radio station in north Africa meanwhile warned the Italian people to clear away from war industries and centers of communi cation or face death from the air. "The allied air forces have re ceived orders," said one such broadcast, "to bomb war Industries and lines of communication as long as they are working in the interests of the axis." Another broadcast thus con cluded: "It is your alliance with Germany that brings our bombs down on Italian cities If you want to save your industries to develop after the war, then demand peace. "Demonstrate for peace!" The Swiss radio as heard here reported that all but skeleton personnel already has been removed from the larger towns in Sicily and that a great evacuation had taken place from Naples. It was announced at allied head quarters here during the day that 67 Italian citizens of occupied Pan-telleria had addressed to General Eisenhower a letter denouncing "the two madmen, Hitler and his faithful vassal Mussolini, and asking the allies to "save the garden of Europe." Slot Fishing license Required R.A.F. WRECKS SOUTH GERMAN RADIO FACTORY Ilk LONDON, June 21 ffl Big British Lancasters roared far into southern Germany last night to bomb the industrial city of Fried-richshafen and the air ministry disclosed tonight that their explosives dealt a crippling blow to the lareest radio-location factory in the reich.

An air ministry communique said heavy damage was caused to the Luftschiffbau radio factory by hits on the main buildings, which formerly were occupied by the great Zeppelin works, but are now devoted to manufacture of the German equivalent of radar. Only three of the four-engined Lancasters failed to return on schedule and it was announced tonight that all three of these had landed safely. Meanwhile, the air ministry Issued new reports on the results of raids which flattened German factories In the bomb-torn Industrial Ruhr valley. Declaring that reconnaissance planes recently gathered "striking evidence of devastation which has brought the battle of the Ruhr to a climax," the air ministry said the "devastation of Germany's industrial towns is greater than any- DIAPER RASH Soothe and cool diaper rash, relieve irritation, and aleo help prevent it by using Mexaana, formerly Mexican Heat Powder. Sprinkle well over raah-irritated akin after every change.

A standby for over 40 years. Costs little. Even greater savings in larger sixes. Always demand Mexaana. OKtinge 0 rtttil I SANTIAGO RESERVOIR V.OUW1 33 Mill! Sluthaait of L.

A. 7 Milaa Fatt nf SA CATFISH BLUEGILL Camillas aUcnlckina Tratlmr Parking P. O. orange, tain, Willi mm CIOKY BUY UNITED STATCi STAMPS thing known in any country In thai world." The Saturday night attack on Lfll Creusot was reported by the Nazi controlled Paris radio today have left the sprawling Schneider armaments works 'nothing but at mountain of debris." The broad- cast said at least 250 persons wer killed and half the town's 15,000 inhabitants left homeless. Child Born to Wife of Heflin, Academy Winner HOLLYWOOD, June 21 (TP) Lieut.

Van Heflin, academy award winner for the best supporting film role last year, today passed cigars to celebrate the birth of daughter late yesterday at Good Samaritan hospital. Mrs. Heflin, the former Franco Neal, M. G. M.

actress, was re- ported in satisfactory condition. COCKTAIL LOUNGE It SALE BARGAIN Liquor Stock Inventory $7,000 DOING EXCELLENT BUSINESS CASH DEAL ONLY Write Sun Box 412 rm EMINENT DOCTORS: We sell PHILIP MORRIS at same price as all other leading brands. IB L3U PHILIP MORRIS proved less irritating to nose and throat No other cigarette can make that statement. It is based on repeated clinical tests with men and women smokers. Here's what happened When smokers changed to Philip Morris, every case of irritation of nose or throat-due to smoking either cleared up completely, or definitely itn proved.

These tests were conducted by distinguished doctors who reported their findings in medical journals, to inform other doctors. Change to Philip Morris, the cigarette proved les3 irritating to the nose and throat, nr LJLJ ol LfU JU Still the tame fresh, fincr-fMvored cigarette despite all war'time package changes. America's FINEST Cigarette If.

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About The San Bernardino County Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,350,050
Years Available:
1894-1998