PAGE FOUR
THE NETVS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
June 21. lMf
Ml)t Atoning $erali)
HERALD fOBUBHTXQ COMPART. ftiblVMM
mm jnncnra .
MALOOUI KPLKY ,
fuellahad arary aiuraooa aicapt Burtday y Tha Baraitj publl thing Oompaay M Kaplaaada
ud Plna KUwU, Klauath FtUa, Ortfoa
laUrad u eootf claw mitUr at tha poatofftoa of Kltttitta rail, Ora, m Actual Ml
IK uodar aci of ooDfraM, March a, 1&7
alembar of Tha Attociatrd Prwa
Th Aiaoclat4 fraat It Mclu.twly aotltltd to th dm of rapabJIeattoa of all
dupatrbaa eradltad to tt or ttol otbanrta cradiud in thit papar, aad aJao tha local aavt
publlahad tiiarala. All rihU of rapabllcatto of apadal dli patch aa ara alio raaarvod.
MBUBER AUDIT BURBAO OF CIRCULATION
BaDraaratxl Nationally hv
rVaat-Hollldaj Ofx, Inc.
8aa rranolaeo, Haw Tort, DatroiL itaaUla. Chicago, Portland, Lot Anfalaa, M. touts,
Vanoouvar. fi. 0. Coplaa of Tha Nawa ana Barald, togathar with eampleta lotorraattoB
about tha Klamath Falls marital, may ba obtalaad (or tha aiktsf at toy of thaaa offteaa.
Thra Month! ,
Rlx Months .
11 Months .
Ona Vaar
UIX BATKS PA? A BUI IH ADVAltCB
By MaU
IB Klamath. Lasa, Modoa aad iJUtyoq CoonUat
0d Taar
Oca Month
Thraa Moo tha ,
Dallrerad by Carrlar ta Clt
Getting Air Minded The Wrong Way
Weekend Roundup
llyHERE is the falls?" is .still a common question
' W among strangers in Klamath Falls. It was
asked the other day at a local business establishment
by a couple from out of town, and the employe to which
the query was addressed could not answer. She asked
someone else, and the visitors were obviously surprised
that a person living here was not able to answer such a
logical question.
This is the tourist season. Klamath needs the tourist
business. One way to attract and retain tourist business
is for all those with whom visitors come in contact to be
ready with correct information on anything local about
which the strangers may be interested.
That is the reason the Klamath junior chamber of
commerce, with the cooperation of the senior chamber and
the state board of vocational education, is sponsoring the
tourist guidance school in Klamath Falls at this time.
First of three night meetings was held on Thursday.
The next is on Monday, and it will feature instructive talks
and a colorful Oregon film, "The New Oregon Trail." This
picture alone is worth the time it will take to go down to
this meeting. On Wednesday evening, Frank Wire, state
game supervisor, will speak on wild life and fish resources
of Klamath county, giving information which any resident
here should want to know.
It is suggested here that effort be made to attend
these meetings. They are open to the public, and should be
of particular interest to those people employed in occupa
tions that distribute goods or services to customers.
Included in this list are retail store employes, service
station attendants, garage operators, hotel greeters and
apartment house operators, restaurant workers, transpor
tation employes, bank employes, barbers and beauty shop
operators.
While we are on the subject of tourist travel, we should
report another suggestion on the'name for the sreat hieh
way, route from Weed, Calif., .to Goshen,. Oregon (over
xno. vi ana the Willamette highway through Klamath
Falls.) . , ...... . - v .- .
-:The name suggested by a '.Klamath .business man is
bKyiine cut-off.;. v ...... jiiv:
Add that to previous suggestions such as Cascade cufc-
oir, Miasta-tJascade cut-off. Shas-cade Wonder Wajr. We
would still like to hear others. If a good name can be
found, let's publicize and give this route ;a!name the
public, will recognize and like. -'-
-1 We lean to the use of the word cut-offfor'it is trulv
descriptive of the route. Skyline cut-off has glamour and
is a good suggestion. Has anyone any others?
c
Behind
By PaulHalion
Telling
The Editor
Latttrs prtntad ntra must not ba mors
than Hi wort In langth, mutt ba wmian
Uflbly on ONB IIDI 0t ha pi par wriy.
and muat ba alerted. Contributiona follow
Ing thoos ruloa. art warmly walooma.
Roads are still slick and wet in parts of the hill
country. It has been an extremely late spring. But it seems
certain the time is now at hand for better weather, good
travel in the hills, outdoors enjoyment in the Klamath
country.
Those who like to live here are they who make use of
these outdoor advantages. They are one of the big things
that make it a great county.
Business Good
At Crater Lake
Charles Fyock, manager of
Crater Lake National park com
pany, was In town Friday and
reported business is good at the
lodge, which Is now operating.
The cafeteria and cabins are also
open at this time.
' Work has started on clearing
the trail to the lake, and it is be
lieved boats will be in operation
by July 1.
Courthouse Records
FRIDAY
- Complaints Filed -
State Unemployment Compen
sation commission versus E. A.
Frlberg. Suit to collect contribu
tions on wages paid by defend
ant Plaintiff demands judgment
of $305.73 with interest at 6 per
cent on sum of $262.78 from
June 11, 1941. W. H. Dashney,
one of attorneys for plaintiff.
Read th Classified Page.
Sunday Dinners
I To you who enjoy better food, Col-Ore offers:
Iced Cocktail Soup
Salad Chilled Relishes
Entrees
Roast Prime-rib of Baby Beef
Pried Milk-Fed Chicken
Baby-Beef Tenderloin Steak
New York Cut Steaks
Potatoes Vegetables . Drink
Assorted Desserts
DINNER DANCE MUSIC BY
SAMMY HERMAN ;
AND HIS BOYS
FOR A LIMITED ENGAGEMENT!
"NORDEEN"
The Mystery Woman
Palmist and Character Analyst
iCAi-ORB
UNION ISSUES
' KLAMATH FALLS, Ore (To
the Editor) The stumbling,
blundering leadership of the IWA
has finally led thousands of hon
est lumber workers up a blind
alley from which there is no
escape. They have finally cre
ated, so much disruption and con
fusion that a sizable portion of
the lumber industry is in such a
mess that the United States army
may be called in to bring some
order out of the confusion. None
of us want to see the army enter
the picture, but in view of the
fact that the - leadership of the
IWA has abandoned all regard
for either the welfare of the men.
the national emergency, or the
future of organized labor, there
seems to be no other course for
Uncle Sam.
Thanks to the action of the CIO
in general and the IWA in par
ticular, legislation certain to
hamstring labor is certain to
come in the immediate future.
What a field day the anti-labor-ites
in congress will have cruci
fying all labor for the mistakes
made by the CIO.
Of all the strikes that are crip
pling the nation's defense pro
gram, the strike of the IWA is
the saddest, and most stupid.
There was no need for it. The
rank and file did not vote for it.
Vet for some mysterious reason
of their own, the leaders kept it
going despite the fact that every
one is well aware that it can gain
nothing.
Months ago the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers union, sained
through collective bargaining,
everything the IWA is now out
on a strike for. The AFL lum
ber workers have been working
all the time and enjoying the best
wages and conditions in history
of the industry, and they got
them through intelligent and co
ordinated action and honest lead
ership. When the defense program got
underway last fall, the Lumber
and Sawmill Workers union
made a bid for decent wage in
creases, some local even hit the
bricks for a few weeks, finally a
temporary settlement was reach'
ed through the graces of the
mediation board. The men got
an increase of five cents an hour
and a promise of a federal sur
vey of the lumber industry.
Meanwhile the IWA accepted a
4 and 5 per cent increase offer
voluntarily made by the em
ployers as an appeasment meas
ure. In a few months the govern
ment survey was completed and
the findings released. The Lum
ber and Sawmill Workers union
hired a university professor to
break down the government re
port and make it understandable
to the ordinary sawdust savage.
Armed with facts and figures
gleaned from the government re
port, the union then went into
negotiations with the employers
on the wage question. In the
end a settlement granting the
workers another seven and one-
half cents an hour was reached.
Not a single man hit the bricks
to get it. The whole matter was
handled on a true collective bar
gaining basis.
Contrast this with what the
IWA did. No sooner was the gov
ernment report released than the
dual organization began belittl
ing it. Instead of taking the re
port and analyzing tt, the IWA
attacked it and did everything
in its power to discredit It. The
IWA committee went into nego
tiations witn a club Instead of a
brief case. The result was that
they ran into difficulties imme
diately. They failed to get the
same improvements in wages and
conditions that the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers union got.
When the IWA committee de-
' cided it had gone as far as it
could, the matter was put to the
membership for a strike vote. In
stead of being counted in the lo
cals, in many Instances the bal
lots were taken to Seattle and
counted by the top faction. The
results were then announced as
virtually unanimous for the
strike. A checkup in many lo
cals revealed the members voted
as high as 12 to one against strike
yet the vote as announced by the
Seattle IWA office was supposed
ly "unanimous'' for strike.
The IWA committee was called
iiilOiiHMjjfiJ!
FOR THOSE WHO WANT TO
H-O-W-L
7oule
AT MIDNIGHT
MYRNA LOY and BILL POWELL
IN
mm
X
WILL BE SHOWN CONTINUOUSLY TODAY WITH
A COMPLETE PROGRAM STARTING
to Washington twice to meet with
the mediation board. Neither
time did the IWA allow the rank
and file to vote on the proposals
made by the mediation board.
Although the IWA seems to Ig
nore it, there is grave national
emergency at hand right now.
The combined efforts of all the
nation's workers are needed if
America is to evade the fate of
France, and other countries dom
inated by Hitler.
There is only one place in
America today for a communist,
and that is six feet under the
ground.
Some 4600 lumber workers
and loggers in the Klamath dis
trict, and-the Rogue river valley
have chosen ' the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers union, AFL, as
their union, in the recent past, to
get better wages, better working
conditions, and to -help them
combat the subversive elements
that are now in our midst, to help
them get a better America, and
keep it free.
The obligation every member
of the Lumber . and Sawmill
Workers union. Is required to
take, requires every man to state
that he is not now and never has I
been a communist.. And if they I
lie to us and get in and we find it AHEAD OF LAW
out, they are blackballed, and; The state department
macKitsted in every AFL union
in America.
' W. YEOMAN
WASHINQTON, June 31
Arming of American mr
chant ships will never ba done
until this country is at war. The
Initial publicity drive to start It
now is being pushed into the ice-
dox quickly and quietly by ad'
ministration authorities.
They think the stories that
they would seek legislation to
place guns on merchantmen
started through erroneous inter
prelatlons of what they ara al
reaay aoing. wavy ts arming
transports, troop carriers and
such auxiliary ships. Apparent
ly word of this activity got
around in congress transformed
into a movement for all mer
chant ships arming as a back'
wash of the sinking of the Robin
MOOT.
Not many favor repeating
that mistake, which led us Into
the tast war as much as any
other. It proved suicidal before
Tho armament could not be suf
ficient to furnish any real do-
fenso against submarines. Mer
chant decks could not stand
many guns or big ones. The
submarines merely began to tor
pedo without warning. Need
less loss of life resulted.
The records show no cases In
which an armed merchantman
bagged a submarine before our
entry Into the war, and very
few afterward. But plenty of
merchantmen were sent down
by subs they never taw.
If the administration desires
to protect American merchant
men, prior to actual partlclpa
tlon In the war, tho prevailing
opinion of Its own military auth
orlties Is that ic-mo other meant
will have to be found, such as
convoying. Destroyers are equip
ped to be a match for their as
sailants. The feebly armed mer
chantmon Is only a deathtrap.
ST. LAWRENCE JOB
The White House Is calling out
the guard for tha St. Lawrence
treaty. Pushed up before con
gress will be Hull. Knox. Stlm
son. Wickard, Knudsen and Gov.
ernor Lehman at starten.
The drive Is being organized
by the administration because
the polls Indicate clearly the leg'
(station could not pass If vote
were taken today. House Chair
man Mansfield privately hat
conceded this.
Mr. Roosevelt's personal mus
tering of his forces is tuppoted
to be a minor secret, but his de
fense leader, Mr. Knudsen. let
tho whiskers of the cat out of the
bag at his last press conference.
The OPM director was asked
why his organization wat sup
porting the St. Lawrence
project.
Because we received a let
ter from the president," replied
Knudsen, who knowt more about
other machinery than tha politi
cal kind.
SIDE GLANCES
,'W" torn.
tow, mitYMivKf;Hrnrt7rrnLlpv-. m r'l j1
"I wan wronif il'v Jusl nn old nuirrlcd coujlc lmvlnu a
U nice ulct quarrel."
19 BEAUTY SHOPS
FUNERAL
REV. ISABELLA H. CLARK
Funeral service for the latu
Rev. Isabella H. Clark, resident
of Sprague River who passed
away in this city on Sunday,
June IS, will take place from
t h e Community church at
Sprague River, Ore., on Sun
day, June 22, at 2 p. m., the Rev.
B. M. Johnson of Chiloauin.
Ore. officiating. Commitment
service and interment will take
place in the Chief Schonchln
cemetery. There will be a morn
ing service commencing prompt
ly at 10 o'clock Sunday morn
ing. Friends are respectfully in
vite d to attend the services.
Ward's Funeral home is ln"
charge of the arrangements.
Looking for Bargains? Turn
to the Classified page
order
barring refugees whose families
remain in Hitler t hands was Is
sued without legal authority, but
no one will say anything. The
step will bo legalized by con
gress shortly. Mr. Roosevelt It
acting swiftly now to meet vari
ous technical situations as they
arise without regard to legal red
tape.
TANKS
War department hat refused
to say how many tanks were
sent to the British In Egypt, al
though It was nothing like tha
400 which the Italians claim. Ac
tually 24 shiploads of equipment
and materials from the United
States have now arrived In Suez.
Not all these cargoes were tanks.
Probably no more than 100 of
our light M l't and M 2't were
involved In the fighting.
Strangest fact of the matter
Is no one here has a report oh
how they fared, the point of the
utmost Importance to ut in our
current program.
Note: The army has quietly
Organization of the Klamath
Falls branch, Oregon Association
of Beauty Shop Owners, is rap
Idly going forward, according to
local officers, and 19 shops, over
a majority In the city, have
signed up with the atsoclatlon.
The association promotes bet
ter working conditions, better
hours for shop employes and an
agreement on prices, It is ex
plained. Price increases which
went Into effect on June 19
were made necessary by the in
creased cott of thop supplies and
living expenses of the operators,
officers said. ,
Cladyt Stephent, Junior vice
pretldent of the state associa
tion left for Portland this week
end to attend a meeting of the
state executive board on June
23.
sary tooting o( railroad engine
whistles.
Ono company aiked for pro.
visions of the city ordinance
governing such matters.
Tho council Invmticutrd and
found regulations n.ve prior
to 18118 required railroad engine
bolls he rung contltmou.ily while
tho engines were operating In
side the city limits. Unit whistles
be blown at every crowing and
that the npeed of trains he llm
Ited to 10 miles per hour.
Somo revisions are contemplated.
Rear-end Crash .
Reported Here
Adding to the long list of ac
cidents which have occurred on
South Sixth street, Pauline Dean
of Tlonesta, Calif., reported to
the license examiner's office in
the courthouse that car driven
by Warren Caldwell, 3844 Den
ver avenue, struck the rear end
of her car Friday at 9:30 p. m.
on the busy thoroughfare.
The woman reported she saw
the Caldwell car In the rear view
mirror as the slowed down In a
lane of traffic and said Caldwell
wat looking down at the time.
No estimate of the damage was
reported.
QUIET. PLEASE!
CENTRALIA. 111., W) In a
campaign against noises, the city
council appealed to railroad of
ficials to eliminate all unneces-
shifted away from the restricted
tide turret for Its big gunt In
the new tank. Last models off
the line show the turret In the
center giving it efficient firing
range.
TODAY
CONTINUOUS FROM It'M
mm
HANDSOME
STARTS TOMORROW
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WHOSE BABY IS WHO?
W srw rmumk M l mm
mi .in mi rouisiu n ln.
n 'nimm Oil mt ikh rm taut
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CHARLES C0BURN
FRANK ALBERTSON
E.X CLIVE
Always 20c No Tax
NOW PLAYING
CONTINUOUS TODAY AND TOMOBBOW FROM II iH
(rtjy?.. well, fust wait till you get
3 fib load of these love birdt,
vy '.(andwedomeeacuckootl)
IS
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'rl) THAN All THEIR Cw I
'ht'p "Mr-ni MONKEYSHINESI
' -rtATUni TIMtl
IATUHOAV AND IUNOAV
eoNTiNuout
FROM ItlM
TWO OUTSTANDING FEATURES
ends today r::H.u.r
Y7
lillltHiar MAm Maaaala
la Mafic rkt((fr
1 THB
UIaJUL.LT wit
AND WESTERN ACTION THRILLER
"WEST OF PINTO BASIN"
PLAYS SUNDAY AND MONDAY
TWO THRILLING ACTION HITS!
WILLIAM BOYD.,
Y'L'K JmJillll HAYDIN ANDY ClYDlt
fc' 12l?2S MINNA OOMBILl ft'
jlgX! "- MOWKJl ANKRUM )
' 2nd Action Hit
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A SHOT
INTHI
WIUIAN IUKD1GAK
KiHwrm
0ONTINU0UI TODAY A SUNDAY MOM II Ud
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HIOHWAY 07 . (OUTH:
AT MIDNIGHT