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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1940)
PAGE FOUR THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. JllllO 21, 1040 BANK JWKIM ItRALt rUHIMIN MMrANV, raNlatari . Maaaala) UIM I Mr If Ta "aaliiaiai Ci.mi at lnliaWi aa Fiaa HUult Valla Ml alaal at a paatafflta Si Klaata Fills On. aa Mat K, 1S04 aaa it at Caastau. Mwa I, 17 Mart at Taa Amildat Fnaa . C (MM ! TM Nan paMft, Statua, CMcaaa, rvniua, in AMtm, M. um, vaacaaw. n Ml aaraia, aaaauw wiia caaipma iirmHuw com vm luaaaia mil an h.a tma M. adtlBB Mao Hl,M. News Be Sir THEN' By Bmjl Mallor 21 MIMIE AUOIT SURUU OF CIRCULATION allam kr Cam la cn Thfaa Maataj . Ill MMlks Baa ran All SATO PAYABII IN ADVAHCI t Mall hi KliaHa. lata, at MM aa Slftlna CaaaMi Da Maatal I 25 4.00 7.X l.U J.2J (.00 fa at if aa4 aftainriia "k atttamlj aMM la taa an af nMbllcatlaa at all am aluattan malt I ana-Hal la B aaaat. aial tlx tat laud am auMliM tkmla. All man An Orderly System KLAMATH'S exuberant young suburbs, whose expansion has made the old city proper look as if it were stand ing still, are assuming new characteristics of maturity and stability. In a short time the suburbs will be served by "city mounted carrier" mail delivery, a sort of cross between . RFD and 4iouse-to-house delivery, and a vast improve ment over the over-burdened RFD service that has been In force in the suburbs. Suburbanites on travelable streets will get their mail from boxes in front of their houses, at the street's edge, regardless of which side of the street they occupy. This has been made possible because a modern, or derly system of street names and house numbers has been Instituted In the suburbs. Suburbanites now have street addresses like those inside the city. The old duplications of street names have been eliminated. It is possible for jveu siranger w go into trie suburbs and find a certain address without del lay and confusion. The Suburban league and its officers are to be com mended for the force that initiated and carries through this program. Certainly it is advantageous not only to suburbanites but to the entire community. ' Refugee Problem IN the last phases of the Spanish civil war, pitiful streams - "in. a jT p er lne Pyrenees and into France .uj ..uuu cu ju camps, ana mere uiey have remained JJeSDlte Cnncimril.. FYs nr a At A -rhof ; ....u x it nf th wJrei? 5 18 be.anninK to reverse itself. Some aciugoeu, anven use cnarr oeiore the Nazi r---r-" u uuoiusu uuiuer. ooon iney win t&X'Z"? d,id .? Spaniards who GemanV Tnd KS LELE 3. Jeen IS Tin asiltr in ... H . wrthblrk",iSl-h!ea?ies: of all time. w"" 4 ' otrewn wun numan wreckage. TcrSs. P d " i8 helPin trough the The Klamath county Red Cross war relief drive closes worthv ci.,.. : wrA.-51Ja, 01. to this - , , .. "4- miuo uj act oeiore the cam. paign closes. It is the decent and humnn fnm-V fm -& i-VJ" uua V7ASHINGTON, June Speaking of bottleneck!. congressmen sra beginning to feel around to find out If the whole national defense program may not be sliding Into an in visible one. What fttnrtl.H th.m ws hit of information their delegates to the launching of the battleship. North Carolina, pocked up at the Brooklyn navy yard. An of ficial there informed them his crews were only 40 per cent ef ficient due to the shortage of skilled labor. Every time he ad vertised for 100 skilled shipyard workers he said he could get only four or five who could ef ficlentlv Derform the work. In the house naval committee. another admiral told how inade quate were the provisions for schooling apprentices at the Philadelphia navy yard, where he was formerly assisned. He said there were only about 80 apprentices there then due to restrictions he had adontad In negotiations with the union. ADoarentlv this umn altn. atlon lurked in Mr. Roosevelt's mind when he talked of con- SCriDtine voilth for aklllav) wnrlr traimng in tne near future. Courthouse Records (THURSDAY) Judgments State Industrial Accident com mission versus James M. Brit ton, James M. Brltton Jr., and Wallace G. Brittnn m.i.. Plaintiff awarded $12.62, with inieren ana costs. By default Before Circuit Court Judge Ed ward a. Asnurst. Complaint riled Klnath Valley Hospital, lne, a COTOo ration. v.rii VrA a Schmoe. Plaintiff asks Judgment ior w.to with interest and $78 costs. D. E. Van Vactor, attorney for plaintiff. Justice Court Clifford N. George. Drunk on a public highway. Fined $10. Lindsay L. Pompey. Drunk on a public highway. Fined $15. Frank Baker. Drunk on a pub lic highway. Fined $18. Larson L. Jackson. Drunk on a public highway. Fined $10. William A. Simpson. Over loading truck and trailer. Fined $28. Thomas F. Rowland. Larceny. Sentenced to two months in the county Jail. Committed. ; Alma Burns. Driving while in toxicated. $100 fine. ineima Hood. Drunk on a public highway. Fined $10. Roy E. Cornell. Drunk on a public highway. Fined $10. Ernest W. Nelson. Giving liquor to an Indian. Pleaded not guilty. Bond set at $250 cash or sauu property. Committed. Pauline K. Towle. No opera- " ucense. t inea $3.50. Transient Found On Railroad Tracks An unMntlfl. . , usiM uan- slent was killed mHo Thi.j.. morning by a Southern Pacific o-ain near Texum, the coroner's office reported yesterday. Discovery of the remains was made by a train crew of a north bound freight about 3 a. m. Dr. George H. Adler, coroner, said that the men noticed what ap peared to be parts of a body along the right-of-way and when the train stnntwl . - 1' 1- 1 U gCU I J" back to investigate. iney tound parts of the body strewn for a distance of about 250 feet alons the imVm notified Dr. Adler. The remains are at Ward's. One of Oreenn'a steads has been turned into the Mount Hood golf course, and is SCene Of thn Bnntinl Tt.U . .uiiUUUUe joage snort stop tournament T O DA T ! IN THE PICTURE MOTION NEWS1 PELICAN BOMBING OF PARIS!.- c a m i r a bicord er IUH0PU 0AHKKST pays PINE TREE war hcturiv. eniTiM Adams tne IICAPII u. s. luiiDf u eirwin VOX FORD SAYS: "5000 FUUIU MR bay nn II, l" WILLKII URIOl "AIB ALlllSI" aMr".?"- ItAINBOW WORK WEEK The rules committee in a nri vate informal session has dis cussed the sudden withdrawal by the navv denartment nt an order for a 48-hour week In navy yards working on defense ves sels. Prevailing rule Is 40 hours, a five-day week of eight hours. Two unpublicized opinions de veloped in the committee. One group held the 48-hour week was not feasible yet because of re stricted capacity of materials and other factors. Another voiced the suggestion that the administration was skiing on soft snow there because the po litical campaign is imminent Admiral Fnrlnnir nt (h h. reau of ordnance privately told legislators he could get an or der from the labor department for a 48-hour week as soon as the navy considers it necessary. Meantime the current arrange ment whereby the government pays time and a half for all work over u flours will continue, and not all congressmen are opposed to that practice. In one of the naval appropriations bills Sen ator Walsh has inserted a n. vision requiring time and a half as well for clerks and nnn.nninn workers. SIDE GLANCES "He admires the intelligent type, mother that means I'll u'5 uy a wnoio new wararoDe r. mlngton five days before the convention in order to "let any one see him who wants to." You can mark it down defi nitely that Halleck, the Indiana congressman, will be chairman of the republican national com mittee u wuiKie wins the nom ination. BEATEN PATH Nazi occUDation mav have ruined the old saw about anyone being able to sit in the Cafe De La Paix and eventually see the entire world pass. But the lo cale may be safelv swltrhd tn the national defense commission. New dealers, economists and business men who have not hn seen in months are flocking there either to join or deal with the rapidly expanding organization. Isadore Lubln, the labor depart ment economist, hs established n office there. So has Paul Por ter, former leader in the orig inal agriculture adjustment ad ministration. Most of this activity was hid den from public gaze by orders directing officials not to talk to newsmen. a FAVORABLE If anyone still doubts that the administration has created completely favorable atmosphere lor me nnuasen-Metunius com mission, let him be notified Ed ward Stettinlus told a caller lh other day: 'If the Job assigned to us is not done successfully. It will h entirely lne fault of the defense commission. but a great deal of their success lies with the operator. The ma chine industry, today, more than ever before, needs young men who have not only learned to think but to think straight Canadian Conscription BUI Near Law OTTAWA, Ont June 21 (UP) The government's emergency conscription bill, passod last night by the house of commons and the senate, today awaited only royal assent to become law. This assent is expected to be given shortly after the new governor-general, Lord Athlone, is sworn into office at noon today. The bill gives the administra tion of Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzle , King almost un limited nowers to comprint manpower, industry, wealth and property lor we aeiense of the dominion, The house nassed thn hill unanimously and without a record vote amid a din of desk pounding. The senate named ihm moat. ure through the required three readings within an hour. FUNERAL CHARLES VICTOR SHUCK Funeral services for the lata Charles Victor Shuck, for years a resident of Merrill, Ore., who Dussed awav In this cltv Thnra. day, June 20, 1940, following an illness ot eight days, will be held in tne First Presbyterian church at Merrill. Ore., on Saturday. June 22, 1940, at 2:30 p. in. with the Rev. Lawrence Mltchelmore Dastor. offlclatlim. Commllmanl services and vault entombment family plot in Merrill cemetery. Friends are Invited. Arranir. merits are tinder the dlrectlnn of the Earl Whitlock Funeral home of this city. JOBS for JUNE GRADUATES mm DIAL 3262 Ends Saturday Madeleine CARROLL Brian AHERNE . 10UIS HAY WARD.. 'My Son. My Son" ALWAYS C001 at the IHl TRIt FOREIGN PLANK 'FxneripnrpH omKnu.j... i -'.-IHMUUII OUJU international lawyers grasoed the inner leadership at once in the formation of thn platform at Philadelphia. Four were most prominent Edge, former nmhactorl . u . . a. io, Fletcher, whn ham h.ll , ,. ' ' '"-" iWMIJ WJI diplomatic posts; George Whar ton pepper, international lawyer with senate exnerienn.. mH emor London, a riicratA t. .v.. ibsx ran-Amerlcan conference. a calm and careful foreign piaiuc is likely to result LEWIS WELCOMED Salty John Lewis was greeted by the republican lg. . Philadelphia like the long lost repuDucan iriend he is. Strang, ers Landon and Fltfhr mHi . JKU him On th haplr anH Aan n tagonistic Charles Halleck of In- cuana (who helped get the labor amendments throueh h hn. against Lewis' wichci avaba himself impressed. iniJJCATIONS Near the tan nf thn nkll. can leaders who do not like the idea of Willkie is supposed to be the 1936 standard bearer, Governor Landon. Nevertheless Willkie went up to nearby Wil- Br WARNER 8EELY Secretary. Warner k Swasey Co. Cleveland With increasing demand for machine tool operators, the question frequently arises as to wnai a young man should study to prepare himself for a career in this field. Fundamentally, the young man must have a natural me chanical aptitude. There is no point in training a young man to oecome a machine tool oper ator Who has no interact In working With his hands and whn aoes not lute ana enjoy work ing with machinery. If this aptitude is present, his course of study can be rather clearly defined. He should specialize in ma chine shop practice. This rather broad subject is taught in techni cal high schools, and gives a fa miliarity with the basic princi ples of machine tool ODeration. It would be well, in order to develop his natural aptitude for the mechanical to an even great er degree, to take some manual training which fiivei him a man. ual dexterity. He should also have a knowl edge of mechanical drawing and of blueprint reading; the former will increase his facility in the practice of the latter. Murh of the work which a machine tool operator does comes to him in blueprint form. Unless ha ran read blueprints with facility and accuracy a great part of his value Is lost. The young man should aln study as much chemistry and physics as possible. While this has no direct aDnlication to ma. chine tool operation, it does give him a knowledse of the scien. tific principles which underlie certain phases of machine tool practice. This may seem rather theoretical to some, but our v pcrience has shown that the high school graduate who has this knowledse Of nhvaira and rhmm istry has a far bettor background iur tne mecnanical trades. For his general information ana Background. I would reeom mend that he take as much as he can in the fields of economics. civics, and government. These give him a broad Dractlcal back. ground which will be useful in any Held of endeavor, and which will aid him in interDretini events which may have an In fluence upon the industry in which he is working. A machine tool onerator miixt have a passion for exactness and for accuracy of measurement. There can be nothing haphazard in machine tool operation. The tools themselves are made as nearly foolproof as Is possible, I I fJI .l 7 II I lack iatarsn eat SaaSar 1 SUNDAY! 1 ' The Story of a Man I tMwtmmmmmmmmmA whs dreamed' . . . and I . I of a Woman who Itepl IV yr--J hli dreams olive aai,ii..mi..-,...x-,z...-..,,.-.,-. .,.7..,.. IkaaTai 2 THRILLERS 15c CaalrU Mra rmtiai lata Pit TODAY wist or THS OIVIDI" "SHOULD HUS. BANDS WORK" TOMORROW "UNDIRCOVIM AUDI" "OUTPOSTS af taa atOUNTIIS" In an effort to develoo safe guards against aircraft engine fires, engineers start an oil blaze in an enninc n'accd in a wind tunnel to simulate flying conditions. These tests help per fect detecting devices and fire resisting qualities of various aircraft construction materials. ft & "it ft ft ALL IN COLOR! urr DAY . "SUSANNAH Of THC M0UNTIIS" " SHIRLEY TtMK.t TOMORROW mi ton in m uw . . . warn OVTUWI OTQuTDX TBI MME! wmt ..and iha fltjfal taaiheiUf: doarats from Bun- r la till lhf s sluejl 7 4 t ii i ii i't n TEX DIAL SW1 NOW COMHITILV AIR C0HDITI0NID TIMOSE ULALiMi COLOIIS THAT UAVE BOWED TO ISJO ONE SINCE THEY CAME MNTO EXISTENCE I A 17771 THE FLAG SPEAKS A FILM THAT HAS CAPTURED 'THE SPIRIT OF THE GREAT AMERICAN PEOPLE THE GREAT AMERICAN NATION1 COMING SUNDAY FEATURED WITH That Storu More Thrilling Than Any HelionZ wrt RAYMOND7 MASSEY FILMED IN OREGON PELICAN PHILADELPHIA, June 21 (UP) The republican national committee last night denounced Col. Frank Knox and Henry L. Stlmson for Joining President Roosevelt's coblnot, and agreed unanimously to challenge the democrats at the polls In Novem ber on the contention Hint they have become "the war party." A few hours aftnr Knnv. 1(13(1 OOP vice presidential candlduto, ana stlmson, secretary or state in tha )nnvr admlnlatratlnn had agreed to serve in the cabi net, they had literally been road out of the party. Action "Personal" A atatamftnt laaund hv Chnlr. man John D. M. Hamilton of tho national committee, which was accepted without dissenting vote, said that the action of the pair "Is purely personal on their part." It pointed out that every individual has tha rlaht tn anrva the state and government in such circumstances as he sees fit. As members of the presi dent's cabinet they owe their nl Icglnnce to the president and hereafter will speak and act Is that capacity," Hamilton said, "Col. Knox's and Mr, Stlmson'i desire for American Interven tion In European sffnlrs Is so. well known that their appoint, ment spcuks for Itself." Hamilton, In roadlng his stata ment to the committee, added: "They nro no longer qualified tn spcuk as ivpulillnuu or tot tho reHilillciin party." Ctl Air CentfltlMMl Dial !M14 DAY ji.-RICHARD RHH TVil Aa4r DllM ' AaaNaii 'ma AND I TO --r.ii aV .tnZT, rum PA m mtt wAcoNmim POPEYE CLUB SATURDAY MORNING 10 O'CLOCK Doon Open 9:30 A. M. ox the stave: BIG SURPRISE CONTEST L XH.US! PHIZES! L.XI (,US! FOR BOTH BOYS AND GIRLS ON THE SCHEEN t2.Hopalong Caindf in -srrtf'"" Special'" MORE COMPLETE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE GIANT "OUIZ" CONTEST MANY BIG PHIZES! AND TERRY AND THE PIRATES Next Thrilling Ch.ptar CARTOON "Practice Makes Perfect" POPEYE CARTOON "LEAVE WELL ENOUGH ALONE" LAST DAY "IRENE" with Ann Negel, The "Alice Blue Gown" Girl T03IOHHOW HOTTEST L ADVENTURES. J . . . In a gam 'wIlirVv t'T 1 dncM wUdwhere zT'WaT aces and eight, call V VTa' Ifif lot a showdown! V . ''kS; J A ermma Ptttm, p?:,TVrf'l'V timtm" CARTOON . TRAVEL . IATIST NIWS LLUaUt.cjAIII o. WAR riCTURII nou iuro'ii ft ft ft ft ft ft ft