The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, December 06, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
December 6, 1D40
Mlt Uentag $eraU
mAKK JBKKIK8
M4LCOLU BlUEY
FofefttbiKl 7 arfWraooa cpt Sunday bj
HERALD I'L'ULIMUNU
Intend m leoood cUi matter at the potoffie of Klamath Pallt, Or, om Auiuit :
. , l MM under act of congreta, March i, iSTf.
'
Mpmhar of The
Tha'Andtd Pch la aiduaivalr entitled
dlipathea ortdtted to It or not otherwise
i UKMDBK AUDIT BUKKAlf OP CIRCULATION
if Rf presented Nationally by
1; Weat liotitday Co, Inc.
San Prandioo, Kew York. Detroit. Hflattle, Chicago, Portland, Loa Antelea, SL Loula.
Vanoir, B. a Conme of Th Ktw and Berald. together with oompleta Information
about the Klanatb Falla market, may b obtained for the aiklng at any of Una office.
Delivered by Carrier In City
2"
Tfiroo Mr.oUn
Om Vu
MAIL RATKS FAYAM.I IN ADVANCB
Dr Mll
H KUmtUi. LUo, Ilodoo nd gliktjoo CoanU
fhrfo tluoUu
li UoHJii
Om Year
Weekend
THIS true story is told of a couple of youngsters who had
saved some money the boy to go to the Oregon
Oregori State football game at Eugene, the girl to buy a
bicycle she had wanted a long time.
They listened to a radio broadcast in which a speaker
urged that everybody use every spare cent in the purchase
of defense bonds and stamps, because the government
needed the money. They had begun to think about giving
up the game and the bicycle, when the next program
started.
,It told of the launching of a ship. The champagne for
the christening was costly stuff, and the woman who broke
the champagne bottle got a present worth several hundred
dollars. Other unnecessary costs were listed and the broad
cast went on to tell how many defense ships were to be
launched and how the total ceremonial costs would run
over a million dollars. The youngsters changed their minds
about how badly their money was needed for defense.
Regardless of who pays the launching bill, it might
be that a ship could slide down the ways with only clean
water splashed over its prow and the woman who breaks
the bottle could take the publicity without the gift. The
money thus saved would buy a lot of defense bonds.
......
t
?'Plow. under the state line" is the suggestion of the
Butte -Valley Star, Dorris newspaper which fails to get
favorably:excited over the proposed formation of the state
of Jefferson. The Dorris paper sees more logic, from Butte
Valley's standpoint, to eliminating the political boundary
between eastern Siskiyou and Klamath counties.
Those sections of eastern Siskiyou and northern Modoc
' counties which are in the same geographic and economic
unit with Klamath county would be welcome' additions to
the latter county. We are sure of that, and the proposal
has mdre practical sense to it than the objective of merely
getting a lot of publicity.
We have an interesting letter from the JAC club of
Mills school, which has for president, James Howard ; for
vice president, Donald Eittrein; for secretary, Mary Grif
fiths. Here is the letter:
Dear Editor: The Junior American Citizens club
J of Mills school pledge their full support to your
cleanup campaign. We have already started a cleanup
campaign on the grounds of Mills school.
The Junior American Citizens club is an active
citizenship club, sponsored by the DAR, and we are
very fortunate in having Mrs. Foster as our director.
. ... . .-- - ' Yours truly,
!.',? '.;',' The JAC.
, liJKlamath Falls, as we said in this column the other
dajr 'needs . to clean up, particularly in the downtown
section Where too many people carelessly throw away bits
ofpaper and other rubbish. If the older people of the
community woum show the
Mills-school, this would be a more pleasant and more at
tractive city.
Salem this week celebrated
servjee. Salem was placed on
civilian, aeronautics authority
won o serve luamatn was turned down.
: Klamath is now completing remarkably fine land
ing facilities on its airport.- Eugene and Salem, smaller
cities of Oregon which have recently been given commer
cial airline service (with no-more, and possibly not as
much 'justification as Klamath Falls) lie in the first con
gressional district Klamath Falls lies in the second district.
What about a little hard work in our behalf by the
second' district congressman?
Defense
Bond
Quiz ;
Q. What kind of Christmas
card is popular this year?
A. The kind that holds a stamp
album, in which the giver places
one or more defense savings
stamps.
Q. Should someone whose in
come is rather uncertain but
who wants to help national de
fense, buy defense savings bonds
when financially able?
A. Certainly. If occasion arises
when cash is needed, a Series E
bond can be redeemed after 60
days from the issue date.
Note To buy defense bonds
and stamps, go to the nearest
postoffice, bank, or savings and
loan association; or write to the
Treasurer of the United States,
Washington, D. C. Also stamps
are now on sale at retail stores.
A. LAST TIMES TODAY
. Umstai Editor
The Herald PuMltbini Company it Kaplanad
Klamath falls. Or eon,
COUPANY, Publlihen
Aiaoclated Prwi
to thi iu of rcpubltcatloa of all aawi
credited In InU paper, and aUo the local
V"
7.S0
Roundup
same spirit as the JAC of
the start of United Airlines
the United schedule bv the
the same time the applica-
Tulelake
The Community guild of the
Tulelake community Presbyter
ian church plans for the annual
Christmas party to be held In the
church annex the afternoon of
December 17 when friends of
members will be guests. A
Christmas tree, program and re
freshments in keeping with the
holiday season are planned.
This week Mr. and Mrs. Gil
bert Osborne left for a visit in
Oregon and Washington. While
north they attended the Crandle-
mere, Reiben wedding at Van
couver. George Cross, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Cross, a graduate
last spring of the Tulelake high
school, is stationed in the air
corps depot at McClellan field,
Sacramento, according to word
reaching here this week.
One of the earliest exhibition
parachute jumps was made from
the Statue of Liberty.
News
Behi
theWs
By &ulMaliok
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 Not
all the railroad strike agree
ment was put on paper. Mr.
Roosevelt had to pay a heavy
price to avoid a walk out.
In his secret negotiations, he
round the unions demanding a
wage hike which would cost
around $800,000,000 a year. His
emergency board recommended
an increase of 7 1 per cent to cost
around $270,000,000. The unions
flatly told him they would not
take a small increase, arguing
that CIO organizers were al
ready burrowing into their
unions and would take advan
tage of their failure. They claim
ed the CIO has been getting
wage increases of .from 10 to
15 per cent.
When the 10 cents an hour in
crease was finally worked out
by Mr. Roosevelt, he called in
Chairman Joe Eastman of the
interstate commerce commission
and suggested freight rates be
increased somewhere around
$55,000,000 a year to pay part
of the costs. Eastman, however,
was non-committal, saying this
was a matter for the whole ICC.
The president also asked East
man to expedite consideration of
future freight rate increases, but
Eastman only promised to do
what he could about it.
The cost of the final settle
ment will run about $325,000,'
uuu, ana the tone of the nego
tiations broadly suggests that the
public will pay the whole bill
in increased rates sooner or
later.
This was ceriainly one occa
sion when the administration's
claim that wages have nothing
to do with prices was refuted
by its own action.
WHAT HAPPENED?
When the congressional
leaders strolled into the White
House the day after the house
passed the strong anti-strike bill,
Mr. Roosevelt lifted his eyes and
asked with some amazement:
"What in the world happened?"
It was easy to tell him. The
house became involved in a
peculiar parliamentary situation
whereby it had to take the
strong bill or nothing. Also the
congressmen were encouraged
to take the drastic bill principal
ly because the CIO and AFL
were against any legislation. The
common saying in the cloakroom
was "we might as well be hung
for sheep or goats." Of the 129
democrats voting for the bill,
luu were Irom southern states.
xne result was as much of a
shock to the congressional lead
ers as to -the president. The
morning of the vote, Speaker
Rayburn thought his house
would sidetrack the bill by send
ing it back to committee.
The senate will tone it down
slightly. Vs-.-J
' '
LAND MINES'- . ''.
Hitler's failures, around Mos
cow lately can be attributed to
the weather and the brilliant
Russian use of land mines. j
The weather has been the
worst In many years. Alternate
freezing, thawing, rain and
snow have caused the German
tanks to bog down. They have
started out in the mornine on
firm frozen ground only to run
into a thaw which creates muddy
footing for the rest of the day.
But even more troublesome to
the Germans is the vast net
work of land mines, the reds
have planted across the whole
center battle line. These auto
matic explosives, touched off by
lanxs rumming over them, are
Deing used on a greater scale
than ever attempted in warfare
Deiore.
Then, too, the reds have plan-
TODAY AND SUNDAY
2
HIT NO.
l
CHARLES
RUGGLES
ELLEN DREW
PHIL TERRY
H - i.
lltO tADIO BcWO M
GUY KIBBEE
Continuous Saturday
and Sunday From 12i30
I 9
1
SIDE GLANCES
Towt mi mni Miwf.ifT. u nan
"Now I get it why Sis wanted lo trade weeks with me
wiping the dishes so I'd get stuck Christmas week, when
we use every dish in the house 1"
ned out thoroughly a defensive
system based on tank traps, con
crete fortifications, pillboxes,
trenches and barbed wire, ad
roitly taking advantage of every
natural barrier. They have even
gone to the extent of bringing
III Htrt it. hlliM mmxnAe in flat'
areas as tank obstacles.
One of this nation's unexposed
defense deficiencies is in land
mines. All we have are now ob
solete, because they are metal
and can be detected by anyi
simple magnet. War authorities1 , """"nation as to the pre
have recognized this and are cfe object of the meetings was
now working on new types.
o
NO WAR SIGN
Cagey old displomatic strate
gists of this government breath-1
ed easier when the Japs let one
of their big ships, the Tatuta
Maru, sail for San Francisco, to
dock December 15. They con
sider it a sure sign the Japs
did not expect war before the
first of the year when the round
trip would be completed.
Courthouse Records
FRIDAY
Docreas
Myron Egeor versus Audlev
tgger. flaintitf granted divorce
Defendant granted custody of
two minors, ownership of one
beauty college, and sole owner
ship of lot 16 in block 308. Plain
tiff Is to receive $250 from de
fendant for attorney fees. Edwin
E. Driscoll, attorney for plain-
int. merryman, Napier, attor
neys for defendant.
Justice Court
Graviel M. Martinez, giving
liquor to Indian. Thirty days, sus
pended.
Wayne E. Delap, no muffler.
Fined $5.50, suspended.
narvey Alien J'emberton, no
clearance lights. Fined $10, sus
pended.
LITTLE DADO WINS
HONOLULU, Dec. 6 UP)
Little Dado of Manila, world
nyweigni cnampion, scored a
10-round decision over Joho
Shiroma of Honolulu before a
crowd of 3500 at the Honolulu
auditorium last night. Dado
weighed 118, Shiroma 115.
Lost Times Today
053
HIT ftO. 1
GENE AUTRY
"Sunset in Wyoming"
HIT NO. 2
RUph Sollimy Mirarat Undoay
"Ellery Queen's
Penthouse Myste ry"
SUNDAY
MONDAY - TUESDAY
20c 20c
I "mORE LAUGHS
I THAN EVER!
1 Irene Dunne
1 Melvyn Douglas
"THEODORA
A GOES WILD"
I Rlcsrdo Cortes '
I William Lundigan l
I .'shot in nr
V THE DARK" C," j
wt. wt.
South Americans
Eye Jap-U. S. Riff
SANTIAGO. Chllo, Dec. 0 (P)
nii .i ...
uiptumauc discussions are un-
derway to arrange a meeting of
bouth American residents ns well
as a conference of foreiirn min.
istcrs of all American republics
because of the possibility of a
United States-Japanese conflict,
informed sources said tonight.
UW.IU3CU uy. mese sources. Dul
presumably it was to determine
the stand of tho other hemis
phere powers toward such a war.
REE:
Li
700 MILES
FromThe Saturday
j fl 1 (THE SWAMP!... I
jJw IJ locale of thf tringet story
WI if itif rten bat vr told!... a
M j? 1 J If: j brooding vastness where a man
X 17 might hide for years and never '
!:VM i f b n-"d DID!
? 4puf if v f m i
3sv ' til 'an 'bJ Bs -
f with
WALTER BRENNAN WALTER HUSTON
ANNE BAXTER DANA ANDREWS
Virginia Oilmore John Corradlne Mary Howard
Eugene Pallelte Ward Bend Oulnn Williams
ftorfuc.d ky HcM AnocM. Pmhar too Hammond tenon MoykytWI.y NltM
' : A 20th
)'.
Tolling
The Editor
LoMoro printed htro mutl not bo moro
than too wortta In Itnglh, mutt bo wrlllan
iMIbly on ONI IO of tho IMpw only,
and miwl bo olinod. Oonlrlbttliono follow.
Nig IhMO mlM. arc warmly wtloomo.
UNION AND CLOSED SHOP
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To
the Editor Under Mr. Shndle's
so-calU'd "union shop" the em
ploye. thoiiKh hired by the em
pinyer, is mrcea 10 neeonie
member of tho union and pay
extortion in the form of dues. If
he feels that he is bolng Imposoil
upon or if he dors not "no alonu
with the hoys," no mutter how
wisp nnd patriotic his action, he
is liable to expulsion nnd conse
quont loss of his Job, or to pun
ishment by devious methods. The
name union shop Is n subter
rune o the labor lenders who
know they had played tholr
closed-shop rnrket too far. They
painted their red clo.ied-.ihnp-
rncKei- norso while nnd called It
by another name, mnklng alluht
concessions in form that were no
permanent concessions at all.
And so we arc back ngnln on the
subject of tho closed shop which
only yesterday the Houso of Rep
resentatives by the Implicit sense
of the Smith bill recounted ns
an evil force, although they did
not go all the way in meeting the
issue.
The union or closed shop Is a
privntc army, an ormy because a
working man Is liable to tyran
nical discipline. If a member ap
peals to the press beeau.io the
leadership for reasons of Its own
agitates a demoralizing strike the
member Is dealt with summarily
or by more devious methods In
volving shop politics or even by
the Inst resort of the goon squad.
A private nnny that defies the
public weal as have both the
private and Inimical armies of
the CIO nnd AFI. is thus become
the public enemy, giving aid and
comfort to the national enemy.
Father Coughlin's treasonable
Christian Front" was a private
army. William Dudley Telley
and Mnjor Van Horn Mosely at
tempted to create private armies
and did not succeed in harming
OF NAMELESS TERROR!
Evening Post Story byVren
CENTURY - FOX PICTURE
STARTS SUNDAY
CONTINUOUS DOORS OPEK 12i30
us as much as have the private
armies of tho closed-shop labor
tyrants. There is no room In the
United States for private armies,
but there Is room for labor or
ganizations Hint conform to the
public welfnro and that can not
under tho law discriminate
against any loyal American citi
zen. Tho right of a man to work
for an employer of mutual choice
Is Inherent In the Declaration of
Independence nnd the Constitu
tion. His right to work must be
guaranteed by a stringent law
that will entirely forbid tho
union-closed shop and that .will,
as does the Smith Act, otherwise
regulate tho unions In the citi
zenship nnd loyally of tholr lead
ership nnd membership, In tholr
finances, their by-laws and their
methods.
Let Mr. Shuttle read Jan Val-
tin's "Out of the Night" to see
how Mr. Pnvolka'i incendiary
appeal for a "sympathy strike"
lo force tho unlon-closcd-shop at
need goes along In deadly paral
lel with the alms of the commun
ist who obtain union control by
rulo-or-ruin the - union methods
disregarding the welfare of the
loyal men nnd tholr Innocent
families whom they are Inciting
to hardship. Unfortunately, un
der our prosent lax laws those
who agitate such strife though
they mnko themselves suspect by
their actions cannot be enjoined
and nre free to threaten our na
tional security.
Yours truly,
orris McCartney.
EXPLAINS SEAL BALE
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To
The Editor) There seemi to be
qulto a llttlo confusion created
over the sale of Christmas seals
that tho Ladies Auxiliary of ;
Local 6 12, I WA CIO Is putting
on. so wp would like this oppor-!
lunlty ot straightening nut any ,
misunderstanding that may
exist.
Wo are not attempting to sell i
theso seals In competition to the i
Tuberculosis Christmas seals.
nor are they being sold under
tho Impression that they are the
Tuberculosis seals, as It Is made
clear to the purchasers that they
ore not.
Wo are supporting the sale of
Tuberculosis seals this year by
Btll
For Theatre
Information
Dial 4S72
Bill
our contributions, Just as we al
ways have In oilier years and we
hopo that everyone iloes like
wise, The proceeds from the snle of
our seals aro used to bring a
llttlo Christmas cheer to klddlef
who otherwise might not l able
to participate In tho holidays as
the more fnrlunntti children do
These seals have been sold In
the past and the money has been
used to help these poor chil
dren. Just ns It will be this year.
We are sorry that any misun
derstand Ing or confusion has dr.
volopnd and wn hope that this
explanation eloars up the mat
ter, as wn are sure that no one
would wish to deprive the chll.
dren of a chance to at least en
joy Christmas Just n llttlo.
MRS. ADA COOPER,
President IWA Auxiliary, Lo
cal No. 10.
LIGHTS OUT
OMAHA, (VI E. Forrls tried
o suve SO cents nnd It cost him
$3,112.
He wanted to pay his light bill
before the discount period ex
pired but he couldn't find a pink
ing placo so he asked a young
fellow to pay It.
After waiting five minutes for
tho receipt, Ferris Investigated
and found the man had walked
right on through tho light com
pany office taking Ferris' $.t.S2
with him.
MIDNITE SHOW
TOMfillT
Previewing Sunday's
Two-Feature Program
Hit No. I
GENE
AUTRY
Hit No. 2
Lynn Barl
Charles Ruggles
'The Perfect Snob'
ENDS TODAY
Cemtrnuoue fei 1f !
STARTS SUNDAY
Hit No. 1 ,
THE
NO.
SCREEN'S
1 ACTION
ACE . . .
Bolow th Rio Grondo!
Gene Au'try
Hit No. a
Comedy-Roma nee
Sh Thought She
Know What She
Wanted But
Romance Has
No Blueprints!
LYNN BARI
CHARLES RUGGLES
Charlotte Greenwood
in
"The Perfect
Snob"
-AOTIOM HIT No.
af TiJr
DIAL
4572
I 4572
nninnoty
PINE TREE
n