PAGE FOUR THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON February 10, 1938 nirnil.D poBLdSHINO Published eYsry aftsrnoon iiwpl Conjpanr at E.plansd. and 1'ln. Baured second cla.s wiur at oa August 0. ""d.r MAIL RATES PAYABLE IN'ADVANCB By Mall county Oulslas County ! '" Thraa Month! IS Monies Oaa Taar - Delivered by Uonth Tbr iionthi 0lx uonim On Yar - -i , l.la - 1.10 MEMBER AUDIT BUUBAU OP ClItCULATION n - A Wsst-HollUlny-Morscnson Co., Ino. . - at-.!... N.w Yortt. Dotrolt. Seattle, Chicago. Portland. '' Sna.' " 'pr S Th. ' N.w. and Herald. ,o,..h.r with complete Infor iS?lo1;,.bou,Pth. Klamath F.IUm.rk.J -a,n.d for th. a.kln. Wet Years in the Surnp MEETING at the federal building this week, lease land operators have undertaken a solution of the serious problem confronting them in the Tule lake sump area. It is a foregone conclusion that the present underwater area, despite the fact it has been recently enlarged, is not going to hold the water this year. The plan under consideration is to give up several thousand additional acres of leased farm land to, the water, thereby relieving pressure that would otherwise cause a break on cropped la"lf that is the problem this year, it is highly possible that it will be even more acute in the future unless some thing definite is done in the way of moving water out of the sump basin. Possibly we are entering a wet cycle. If so, each succeeding year will find more water pouring into the sump, with consequent reduction of the farm land area and possible damage to land not actually under For that reason, It is of the utmost importance to the Klamath country that removal of a part of the sump waters is made possible. Fortunately, a constructive plan has been developed and is now before the authorities at Washington. The reclamation service and the biological survey are reportedly agreed on its essential features. There is a possibility congress in its current session may appropriate the money to dig a tunnel from Tule lake to Lower Klamath lake, where the excess water would be welcome for grazing and bird nesting programs. The situation troubling the leased land operators serves to direct, attention to the imperative need for action on the diversion program. Oregon and California congressional delegations should be on their toes to give this plan the needed support. Personal Liberty ONE of these fine days when some one of the thousands of state and federal laws in the U. S. statute list hits you in a vulnerable spot and you rebelliously mutter about infringements on personal liberty, Consider the case of a gentleman in Germany. Sentenced to serve six months in a concentration camp because his politics did not agree with those of the Nazi party, the German citizen applied for a renewal of his driver's license when he was released from the camp. It was refused. To his appeal the Prussian Supreme Court ruled that inasmuch as the National Socialist Party now represents the people's only political opinion, the appellant was an enemy of the state because he did not subscribe to that party's views. As an untrustworthy citizen he conse quently could not enjoy the privilege of driving an auto in Germany. Personal liberty is a relative matter, after all. GRANGE CLUB HOLDS MEETING MIDLAND H. E. club of Mid' land held tbelr regular meeting Wednesday afternoo- at Grange hall. The next meeting trill be at home of Mrs. Alec Cbeyne, on March 9. After the meeting was conclud ed refreshments were served by hostesses, Mesdames J. B. and 8. L. Burnett. CHILOQUIN CHILOQUIN Mrs. Mary Hazel Baker left Friday noon for Larimore, N. D., for a visit with relatives. J. Q. Buell left Thursday nlcht for Little Rock, Ark., to attend the funeral services for hi. I father who passed away In that city February 10. Tho McAbees held a card party THE GAME that kills TOMORROW Ll Mytttryl Thrill I ...ana plain Hysterics I COMPANY. Publlshsra .Editor Sunday by The Herald Publlshlnc Str..l. Kl.m.lh Falls. Or.gon. tha paaloffloa of Klamath Falls. Ore. cl of Congress, March 17. 6.00 6-00 Carrier in City ICatlnn.tlV bV in the Union hall on Thursday night. Mr. and Mrs. George Snyder winning both prizes given for high score. Mrs. Ted Connelly shopped in Klamath Falls on Friday. Mrs. A. H. Sullivan shopped in Klamath Falls on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Roberts returned Thursday evening from a visit in Eugene and coast towns. Brice Connelly has returned from a six months stay in Illinois. COMING SATURDAY mm SAMUEL GOLDWYN pretenlt News Rfhin ByPAULrJALLON.JSr WASHINGTON, February 16 -. Mr. Morgcnthau seems to have uncovered a Utter of budget kittens lu an executive session with the house appropriations sub-committee recently. It did not get out but the treas ury secretary indicated Mr. Roose velt will ask only the billion dol lars in the budget for relief next year (beginning July 1), but will Insist that the Woodrum amend ment strings be removed from it. Mr. Morgenthau Implied the president wants the strings off so the billion can be spent as fast as "needed." Then Mr. R can go be fore congress next January anil get whatever additional money is "needed" to till out the year. Committeemen accepted the plan without astonishment. All political forces here have been dulled Into accepting relief as an unlimited federal duty. But afterward they began talking over the prospect that they are becomiug involved in a game of "fooling the budget" not only as to relief but also on the new rearmament program and par ticularly on the farm bill. WIXDFALIV For instance, iho legislators call the farm measure the greatest po litical windfall of the pre-election session. It carried prospects of in estimable expenditures without be ing laden with the political dis taste, of raising a corresponding dime of revenue. It was done this way; The farm groups got together and decided they would follow Mr. Roosevelt's warning not to appropriate more than the $500,000,000 of farm re lief expenditures this year. So they authorized only limited benefit payments now but prOTided inesti mable future payments if and when funds become available. Most novel of these Ideas is the parity payment plan designed to give the farmers a guaranteed price for their products. It was es timated by no less an authority than the house farm chairman Jones, during (he hearings, (hat this plan would have cost $1,500, 000,000 ff it had been In operation last year. Naturally the pressure of inter ested farm groups will shortly turn to the purpose of oiakmg funds available. BL'DGET BLASTED Another budgetary delusion In the farm bill is the proposal for loans to be made on crops when prices decline. While these loans have good collateral, the whole ex perience of government (remem ber the farm board) is that they lose money. But the point is that whatever money they lose will not appear in the budget until after it is lost. On a somewhat similar basis Is the proposed expenditure of up wards of a billion dollars for army and navy building. Presentation of the program was delayed until after the budget was submitted early In January so It would not unbalance those fine figures. No one yet knows what it will cost next year because direct appropri ations are also being delayed. One thing clear is that it will cost up wards of a billion during the next three or four years. When you add to these facts the point that the $250,000,000 relief appropriation now being made Is extra-budgetary, you should have a fairly good idea why Mr. Mor genthau is nearly bald and Mr. Roosevelt has been brusque with most of his visitors at the White House lately. The budget seems to have been torn tip and thrown away within six short weeks after it was sub mitted. RUNAWAY This sudden wooing of Britannia by the two urchins from across the SIDE GLANCES -b crk "l.!2?fvcA.nt wa.v y" ca0 channel, Messrs. Hitler and Musso lini, roused more than a chuckle at the official top hero. The inside answer to thut one is the British rearmament program has proceeded faster and more fur iously than the outside world yet realizes. It Is believed among the highest officials hero that Hritain is about to resume her traditional position as the balancer of power in Europe largely on the strength of what she has done during the past year to increase her air and subsidiary naval forces. Even those authorities who advocate minimum armaments are inclined to accept that deduction. They say both Italy and Germany are dis covering they cannot keep the pace. Cenrral assumption is Hritain will play one suitor off airainst an other, probably on the basis uf their close rivalry over Austria. It may mean the return of Eur ope to its old diplomatic game on the pre-dictator standard. UOO! CHANCE Open hints that General Franco is planning a spring drive are con firmed by rrivate cables In the best code. He will probably strike be tween Madrid and the sea In hopes of cutting off the loyalists' ports and capitol. Good military judges surmise he has a good chance for success If ho can continue to count on Italian help. He has not been using the 50.000 to 60.000 Italians ho has in the line lately. Undoubtedly Mus solini prevented their use In view of the general European situation. Franco is in fairly good shape. His tax on exports Is bringing him !i , TOMORROW :Z TWO DAYS OIILY! I Now Paying - Thru Thursday NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! Si fi --4j.iJJ& I f jt'''''" - -' ' $$i$twJ CARTOON "THE LION HUNT" I I , ,nif ' 'V ,-fl mjOBSiSSam.. LATEST NEWS FLASHES 111 ll '"f ' & COMING FRIDAY "J j f ' 7 yi 1 SlMI SSSlll I III fl VM&HMi'ii'Kt .1,1 M--mmaXUmmJtJ. C' .J. ,, i. . Jf I LA... i JsaW jr-?!:-' : -ii).Hi.i I.,.,, i, m ,t Y I 'isirflUr SB&l U-f-t " - " t SK35UU-US?i i 'Nprma Shearer is acclaimed the greatest lrggjLW j 111 A;so Jjljetof all time .. . WS I AU COLOR Fai!! 11 1 kjpws LATEST NEWS AlTHiffSTU viouikimbimooph LvU rMllr 111-UllLsLLCI I a t i park in such small spuci's! onough revenue so ho may expect to coutlnuo indefinitely, Loyalists are scraping the bottom of their gold reserve barrel. They can gel supplies only as long as Hie gold lasts. Ten Years Ago In Klamath TrHE proposal that tho city pay prevailing wage scales and give preference to Klamath Fulls residents on city projects was again tahled last nU'lU by a city council determined to he on the .safe lde before taklni; definite action. With the political simmering an prospective candidates ncrutl nize tho electoral horltou, a sur vey indicates that tho hottest race on the ballot will be fur the posi tion of sheriff. lli i lion lt.-rt Hawkins, present sheriff, the most prominently mentioned as an entry Is Uoyd Low. Others include Pat Winfrey, city police man, and Charles I)cl,np, deputy county clerk. The new $300,000 Klamath union high school Is rapidly Hear ing completion and mid-March will see Its finish, according to James Quhin, contractor. Tho building contaliiK 24 rooms, equip ped as n metropolitan school, with all classrooms wired for ra dio reception. MERRILL QUINTET EYES TRIP TO ASHLAND TOURNEY MKttllll.l. Willi second placo in Klamath-Siskiyou eonioroneo play as a goal, t'oach llanu's linopstcrs ko Into action against Kent) on the home courC next Fri day night to dutorinliio standing of the siiunds for onlrniiro In Iho Ashland "H" class tournament March 3-4-5. Tlio winner ac company tint undefeated C'hllo qutn lads who play their prowess iiKnln.il It) other tennis of this district for tlio ehanco to enter state finals in Salem, March 10 lo 10 inclusive. Friday night's game winds up the conference season for 1937-1938. Teams other than the 10 rank ing mi muls of the district attend (ho tournament by Invitation of Iho Ashland Normal school nffl clnla'und tho stato athlutlc asso ciation. SON OF CHIEF PAULINO PASSES Peter l'nulino, son of the lute Chief l'nulino, passed away at his lata residence nt Pluto Cnmp near llenlty, Oregon, at 1 p. m. on February M at tho ago of SU years. Ills father, Chief 'auliuo, was one of (ho sinners of the Great Treaty of 1 S a 5. This treaty was signed somewhere nt tho eastern end of the present Klamath Indian reservation. WEATHER HALTS DITCH OPERATIONS Tt'I.Kl.AKF. Operation on tho reclamation drug lines workltiK three eight hour shifts on ditches and luterni on the new homestead lands lu tho Stronghold area has been temporarily dlHcontinucd un til road and weather conditions clear tip. Work will be resumed as soon its possible that waterways mny tie available when the laud Is set tled. Obituaries I'KTF.U ria i.iNA 1'eter reilllna, a resident of lleatty. Oregon, passed away at his resldenco at IMute t'ump. near lleatty, Oregon, on Monday, Feb. 11. at 1 p. in. following a lingering Illness, The deceased was native of the Klntn:ilh res ervation and was aged so years when called. Ho Is survived liy tils wife, Klva: one son, Paul; a grandson, llllbert, and a grand daughter, F.lfrcdn reullua, all of lleatty. Oregon. Th remains rest In Ward's Klamath Funeral Home. ;i 2 0 High street. The notice of funeral arrangements will be announced at a Inter date. lias it ever occurred to you that If tho vibrations of the air were just properly stepped up you might feel them clearly In your fingers nnd thereby hear through your fingers? Dr. It. II. tinult, Northwestern Unlver- i ally. LAST U DAY LOVE The Family Doctor ny int. .Momtis I isiiiii:in Killtnr, Journal of iho American Medical ANS4H'lalinn nm tlf llygela, dm Health Mugiulno llOHT physicians can linuonibor ivl Iho 1 1 ma when neither the word nor Iho Idea of ullorgy had developed In medicine. Today everybody talks about sennlllvliy, hyporsonsltlvlly, niiergy or nna phyln&ls, Ws have recognised Iho fact that changes lake placo lu lliu human tissues whereby they bo couio exceedingly sensitive to var ious substances and that the mnnlfestntlnna of those en sltlvltloa may he of Iho nature uf dlsoaso. 11 is generally helleved today that heredity la Important and that people who are themselves sensltlvo with symptoms of hay fever, asthma, hendncht) or erup tions on tho skin as manlfestn tlous. are slightly morn likely to have children who develop simi lar symptoms. In an allempt to understand tho nature of I lie condition, studies have also been mndo of the glands lu relnllonnhlp lo nl lergy, but the majority of the evidence does not indlcatn that the phenomenon of sensitivity Is primarily glandular. Klnre, how ever, the glands are I lit 1 unit c ly hound with most of the functions of the human being. It Is roasou ablo to believe ibat the nature of tbi reaction lo sensitivity may bo mudlflcd by glandular disturb ances. Since the vitamins have also attracted a great deal of atten tion In recent years studies have been mndo of the Influence of the vllamlns on allergy. Par ticularly Interesting are si miles to determine whether or nut the allergic condition could In modi fied or controlled by giving vltn mln ( In excessive amounts. It Is conceivable that vitamins may affect the processes of In fection as well as the processes of sensitivity. ... fblef of tho phenomena of sensitivity Is bay fever. lirud llally complete studies are being mnue of the pollens available In every part of (ho t'nlted Slates nt various seasons of the year, patients with hay fever are treat ed by Inking the pollens either by mouth or by lnectlon or In the form of nintincnts rubbed In Ibn skin. All of this work Is. of course, still somewhat experimental. While somo patients seem to do IS ON THE AIR" HOW ESSZLS31 HOW I "COUNCIL fiWi "LOVE I FOR CRIME" TAKES FLIGHT" I i . . - .--s-w -SSSSS1 much better when I hoy r d scnnltlicd with the pollens used In various ways, oilier, do not senm In Improve at nil. Ill addi tion there are people who suffer regularly with symptoms like those or bay fever but at all time of Iho .vonr, being sensitive to siihslnnroH lllio orris powder, dandruff from aultuals, fenthois or dust. Sometimes this type of patlont Improves wlih an Improvement In bis hygiene, getting moro exer cise, rilling less and taking plenty of rest In n clean nliuuspheio, lu addition moans have been dis covered for changing (lis mucous membrane In the nose, using var ious caustic substances, electric currents nnd similar methods. Whereas some pnllcnls seem lo Improve under these methods, others do not. Wo know now that some people, tuny be so sensitive to certain drugs that (hoy respond prompt ly with orupllnns of the skin fol lowing oven a tiny dose. There seem to ho cases lu which th cntlng of cerinlu foods may so In fluence the blood (hat there arc profound changes In the numbers of cells of various types and these changes In the numbers of cells are reflected In serious conditions llko hlecdliii, weakness, swelling or similar symptoms. The human body is a compli cated. Intricate mechanism and Ibn application of all of the great est refinements of medical scleiica may ho required before ih prob lem of sensitivity Is fully elucidated. Court House Records (Tl'ICSDAV) Divorce Hull Filed Klnfi M. HptH'hl versus l.oe a. Specht. rhnrKo, desertion. Cou ple married liecember I, 1930. n llciid. plaintiff asks restoration of maiden name, Kdnn M. Depuy. W. I.amar Townsond, attorney for plnlnilff. Case nlmlsar1 Mary I, . Moore, Charles L. Monro. Henrietta K. .Moore and Mary II. Moore versus A. i'lnelll and Krmn I'lnelll and First Na tional bank. Action dismissed oa motion of plaintiff. .Mni-rlnge Application TAtillK lloCI.F.MIKCK -'- Har old J. lugge, 1M, mechanic, native of tiland Island, Neb., resident of Tulelake. Hetty Houlenbeck. It, housewife, native of Rapulpa, Okln., resident of Titlelske. RONALD REAGAN JUNE TRAVIS Eduardo Clannelll VsJ RAINBOW