PAGE FOUR December 20. in HAKIC JKffKlrTl MALCOLM EPLEY .. Wllor . UuilD Editor Publlabad ttarr aJtaraooa aicapt Sunday b Tha Harald Publlahlng Oonpaaj at Eaplaaada uu . u iuihi rati, virrv. HIRALD FUBUSHLXO COUFaXY, Fubllaban KnUrtd u aaeond alaaa mattar al tha poatofftoa of Klamatb ralla. Or ea Aufjit K. mm wiw t vi ajninii! Marca a. laia. Mrjrihar of Tha Aaaoclatrd Pma Tha Aaaodalad Praia la axelualvalv anlltlcd to tha uia of rtpublkatloa of all aaaa dlipatchra errdllad to It or not ouiennia wadilad m thla paprr. and alio tha Meal paws publtahad therrln. AU rtht of rapubllcatloa of apodal dlapatcbaa ara alao raaarrad. MEMBER AD01T BUREAU Or CIRCULATION Brprrarntad Nationally by Waat-Hollldar Co- Inc. fUa Prandira. Rev York, DHrolt, Brattle, Chicago, Portland, Lot AbctIm. fit. Look. Vanoourar, B. C. Coplra of Tha Nrara and Herald. logcUter aitb eomplrta lofornitioo about tha Klamath Fall! narkrt, mar ba obtalnrd fnr tha aakto( at any of tbtaa offleaa. tiauraraa 07 earner u Wlj Ona Month .Tl Thraa U on tha I Ooa Taa r Tlirra Munthi li Mentha Ona Vaar KAIL BATES PAYABLE IN ADVAXCE Br Mail Klamath, Lake, Modoc aod SlaUjoa Couotlta a act) Let's Finish This lLAMATH county at the latest report was far behind l many other counties in Oregon in the campaign for the American Red Cross war relief fund. This is not like Klamath county. The reason, we suspect, is that most people have been too busy with holiday matters to make their contributions to the Red Cross. Business people and concerns, in par ticular, seem to have lagged in giving, a factor bearing out this theory. But this is not a good excuse, for people in other com munities, which have raised their quotas, were also busy with holiday affairs. It is true that in Klamath county there has been no solicitation, and it is still hoped the $10,000 quota can be raised without it. Let's do it now. &EWS Beh bBULlALLON Few Japs in This Area WHEN the United States census for 1940 was taken, Klamath county had one Japanese resident a male, born in the United States or one of its possessions. Lake county had 11 Japanese, six being born in the United States and five being Japanese aliens. In the state as a whole, there were 4071 Japanese, in. luding 2454 American-born Japanese and 1617 aliens. Multnomah, of course, has the largest number of Japs, but there are heavy concentrations in truck-farming coun ties such as Clackamas, with 163; Hood River, with 462; Marion, 193; Washington, 245. Malheur county has 137 Japanese, who are largely engaged in the sugar beet in dustry. Siskiyou county, California, has seven Japanese resi dents, including three aliens. Modoc county has four, all of them being aliens. In the general area served by this newspaper there is no serious problem concerned with enemy aliens. There are a considerable number of natives of Italy, but most of these people have demonstrated their loyalty. Travel Reduced TRAVEL-LOVING Klamath people already are finding their running-around restricted by the tire situation, blackouts, and other conditions arising from the war. It is unlikely local speedometers will show their, customary .annual increases in 1942. The need for shortening pleasure travel distances may give many Klamath people an urge to find out more this year about the interesting country close at hand. There is plenty of It. x For the present, unnecessary travel is being discour- BofpA Rnnrl i.nn!finna ava ni,rn.,nw.l.l. .a. . i- r w vuuuiuviio am uiuavuiouie at mis season 01 tame over t. tne year, and weather reDorts for the trpTipmi nnhi; am our mirsuits took tn th not so complete as in the past. Night travel is likely to promptly. The Japs disappeared Jni- ..LI 1 tl 1 i tirikn.it i W ; r.. ui mw uuuuitj in OiaCKOUL areas. nguiiug. dui uur pur suit group was so small it could not maintain a continuous for midable patrol in the air. The moment that the bulk of it land ed for refueling, the Jap bomb ers were back. A good many, too many, of our ships were de stroyed on the ground. Our Side Gets Organized Telling The Editor ttlttr prln I hi ltr mini not tia mort Hun 100 Mrotda In Itw.glh, -nut) to miHim, Uiblr on ONI ktUI of ilia pipw vnlr. and mull alintd. Contribution follow Ing IfitM rulM, ar warmly walMmfc SIDE GLANCES WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 Everyone here knew what Churchill meant when he hinted there mav be darker dav ahead We must be prepared for the loss ot me rar East Singapore, the Philippines, Dutch East Indies, and everything west of Hawaii except Australia. Everyone also knows the rea son. Neither we nor the RHtil had sufficient air or sea forces on the job to warrant high hopes of immediate success. Valor cannot always substitute for ma chines. When the first Jan hnmhora came over Clark field, Manila, Certain it is, that the day after ! Wake fell and at a time when ' Jap transports were riding se curely off Luzon, "an admiral in command of a combat force of , U. S. warships" was giving an i interview to the A. P. at Pearl Harbor aboard his flagship. In any event the answer to the fleet question is the same as that of Singapore and the Philippines. The lesson is clear. Wherever we go hereafter we must have superiority in the air. a a WE CAN TAKE IT Some congressmen and other politicians are afraid that if or when this bad news continues to pile up the next few months, our I people will get restless. More ! congressional inquiries and courtmartials may be demanded. Confusion may result. That thought, of course, is in , suiting. If this country has such i weak knees that it cannot stand ; reverses, then we do not deserve to win. If we have become so Hems oi Thought LOVE ONE ANOTHER Lose is never lost, f not re ciprocated it will flow back and soften and purify the heart. Washington Irving. "Love one another, as I have loved you." No estrangement, no emulation, no deceit, enters into the iteart that loves as Jesus ' cnoimer wn nni.i h ri RAILROAD QUESTIONS KLAMATH FALLS. Ore. (To thu Editor) I road the article in the November 14 Herald by Artluir M. Geary, also the one on November 4 from "Lis tener In." Wlinl iliKiisls me (iiiul Hie liiborlng class of peo ple in neutral) is when Mimeoiic like Mr. Geary tiles lo poison the minds ot the ijetionil public awiinst labor mul lnbor oi'Kiin iintioiis, especially railroad la bor, ornani.atkm. They either lilve out the wronn Information entirely, or only a small part of the facts intended lo mislead the public on the biilnuer. Mr. Geary does not mention the political power of Hie rail road inaniiiionionls, wlm-li mtiko the political power of the broth erhoods look mighty small in comparison. If Mr. Geary wishes to crititu what he calls "pressure iiroup politics." he should include the railroad managements and the heads of all other industries that hire lnbor. And If it had o happened that Mr. Gearys typist was working for a rail road, then she would be 1(10 per rent for the railroad man. And I'll be she would have hnd an awful frown on her face while she was typing his correspondence. Referring to Mr. Geary's quotation from the Railway Age i about a locomotive engineer I getting $8.65 per hour, or a con-' ductor making $400 per month working two hours per day. I ; have spent nearly 40 years In railroad service, and I have yet to even know of this happening i in even one instance. But, grant-! ing that such a thing Is barclv I possible, it would only apply lo one case in hundreds or maybe ' thousands. Mr. Geary did not give the public the Information as to how it might be possible to a certain degree in very rare occasions. Neither did the Hall way Age. nor the National Grange. They did not want the public to know Hint much. The quotations were evidently j based on some streamliner train I making 100 miles per hour. I which they do In certain spots under favorable conditions. The per 100 miles run, equivalent to one day. Alright, what is wrong if he did train 100 miles In one hour as I and get his one day s pay for it? company increased their MS trra mi ay at aravwf . at tm ara o a f r err. f "I'm (jluc! 1 IkhikIiI n new lrcss for Hie Browns' piirly inaylK' il will keep people from noticing tint t you ncc u liiiircutl" loved. It is a false sense of love that, like the summer brook, soon gets dry. Mary Baker Eddy. It is the very essence of love, 1 The of nobleness, of greatness, to be hourly income from that train by willing to suffer for the good of! moving it 100 miles In one hour others. Spencer. i in the same proportion that the Divine love is a sacred flower, I engineer's IVburly rate wns In- which in its early bud js happi- j creased. I ncss, and in its full bloom is' The company received the' heaven. Eleanor L. Hervey. j same revenue for moving that How shall I do tn love'' Ro.i train 100 files In nnn hour n soft and decadent that we cannot lievc. How shall I do to believe?! ,hcy would If it had taken all Merry Christmas, Ltd. DEND BULLETIN refused this year to toss out a "Merry U Christmas" greeting to all and sundry. In fact, the Bulletin confessed that for a few days before Christmas it had no hankering to say "Merry Christmas" to any body. But the spirit of the occasion got the best of the editor, and at last he announced: "We'll take in most of the world. We'll say Merry Christmas to our friends and do it with all the old fervor. As to the Japs and Germans? Why, to hell with them." We knew the Bulletin would come through. We sus pect that it abandoned the Scrooge tradition about the time the editor sampled some Klamath potatoes that were Bent up that way just before Christmas. Transportation NflUC I liwlly Carloadings Fall Short of Peaks Forecast for 1941 While railroad carloadings this fall fell short nf 1ht noa Lro prophesied earlier in the year in some quarters, loadings week ly through the last three months did average 900,000, according to the western railways commit tee. The weekly averaffr Ihmuoh this period in 1941 was about Ju,uuo cars above the average for the corresponding weeks last year. A highly gratifying thing about the experience this year, from a railroad stand point. Is that the railroads were able to come through the peak season with surplus car capacity in face of very heavy car re quirements through three con secutive months. While carloadings this year nave been heavier than in any other recent year, they have not reached an all time peak, as is true with respect to the amount of freight service being per formed by the railroads in 1941. Carloadings in the first eight months this year were 21.6 per cent fewer than they were In the first eight months of 1929, The amount nf froioM Ice performed In the first eight Bananas urn ratmA u u -.. ., . - ----- uiwyui- vi miami. ria.. in hl months this year, measured in back yard. revenue ton miles, was 1.8 per cent higher than it was in the corresponding period of 1929. Railroad Taxes Take Big Jump Railroad tax accruals in the first nine months of 1941 aver aged approximately $465,000 a day more than in the first three-quarters of the preceding year. Total tax accruals in the first nine months were more than $25,000,000 ereator than k. full year of 1940, when they reacnea a level higher than in any year in nrecerilns hwr at If Railroad tax accruals in the first nine months this year were $128,645,606 greater than in the corresponding months of 1940. Two Killed in Auto Accidents PORTLAND. Dee. 20 im William Eivers, 87, Portland, was fatally injured hv fin aiilnmn. bile at a downtown Intersection yesterday. His death was Port lands 61st traffic fatalitv of the year. OREGON CITV ni fro rn Richard W. Crawfnrrl 'in . of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Crawford, died at the Oreeon CAtv hner.it a 1 yesterday of automobile accident injuries. Merrill G. Brassfleld, Lyons, said the Crawford boy ran across the highway in front of his automobile near Molalla. THEY ARE IN LIBYA Pursuit shins could not he flown out in quantities. Their range is too short, even for the shortest land hops across from South America to Africa and India. But even if we had them there, we would not have had sufficient Philippine air fields. Serious Drenaratinna rnr that de fense Of Luzon were not nnripr. ! taken until the Japs started mov ing aown tne t rench-Indo China coast acquiring bases on the PhiliPDine flank a few mnnth. back. The long rainy season set in thereafter and fields could not be adequately prepared. Just as the season ended, the Jam struck. But the main reason was truth fully presented by Churchill. We concentrated all the planes we could spare last summer in Libya for a victory that is now being won. WHERE 13 THE FLEET Question being asked in the streets of Washington (not only by outsiders but by some govern ment officials) is: "Where is the fleet?" If precise information Was available, it ahnnlrl nnl K published. It is no military sec ret, nowever, that it has not been around the Philippines. When 50 to 100 Jan tranrjnnrta ran anchor off-shore, with onlv minor losses being reported, you may know the Jans are rnnfirlent of their security on the sea. ine irutn probably Is that our - -v biiu iiaa uc.iucu IJUl to risk heaw shins in wnter. wnere me enemy has air super iority, especially after what hap pened to the Prince of Wa!p and Repulse. It is also nrnhnhlo o third of the fleet was in the At lantic when the blow fell. A redistribution nf naval fnFnaa la obviously necessary. The British should have enough of their own capital ships to take care of the Atlantic even If the French fleet is betrayed into nazl hands. Per haps this is a primary subject of the Roosevelt-Churchill gathering. survive defeats, and come out of them fighting better, we might as well know it at the start. a GIBRALTAR FOR THE JAPS Remember this war "broke for us under the most inauspicious circumstances. We are fighting halfway around the world from the homeland. We are defending inadequate outposts that most military authorities, knew could not be made impregnable. (Some folks are grunting now at con gressmen who voted against ouam appropriations, whereas, if we had built a Gibraltar there, it now is evident we would have built it for the Japs.) Worse than that, the fall of the Far East may yet bring the Japs back in force upon Hawaii during the coming year. If the Japs once get their hands on Dutch oil and raw materials they are going to be more formid able. It will be difficult to fight our way back ("in 1943" as Churchill says?) But the next time we go, it will be with superiority in air and on the sea. a Today's suggestion of how you can personally help to win this war (No. 6): Remind any mourning dolts that worthwhile nations grow stronger in adversity. Softness which comes with success is what ruins them, or, if he is not worth wasting time in argument. Just tell him to go buy a defense bond. I Love. Leighton. Christian Science doy, and the engineer would re ceive only his $8.05 if ,t , taken him five hours Instead of one. Railroad rates, both passenger "Christian Science" was the I and freight, are all figured on a subject of the Lesson-Sermon in mileage basis. Therefore, It Is all Churches of Christ, Scientist,! entirely proper that wages on Sunday, December 28. should be figured the same. The Golden Text was. "Heal There are plenty of people In the the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise! Unitcd States that do get more the dead, cast out devils: freely than $M per hour for doing n lot less tluin lliat engineer did when he ran thnt train 1UU miles in one hour, and they do not liuve even ono per cent of the responsibility that that engineer assumed. I have un Idea even Mr. Cicnry received more llinn that amount per hour for the time spent In making his speech on November 1. and while writing his article for The Herald. Hut I dare say he would not like to keep It up for eiht hours for Unit. Nor could lie keep It up every day, either if he wanted to. In conclusion, speaking of high wages, etc : When a pet crow can draw StiO a day in the mo lei and so many oilier simi lar silly things that the public willingly go for, they ought not begrudge an engineer $8 05 for hauling them 130 miles on the most luxurious train that has ever been built. A CASUAL OUSERVEH. Furniture Workers Threaten Strike At Portland Plant PORTLAND, Dec. 29 (PI John Hrost, Oregon CIO presi dent, said today 1(100 workers at tho Dnernbecher Manufactur ing company here would strike at midnight Wednesday unless the management agreed to prbi-! tration of a wage dispute. He said the CIO Furniture1 Workers union at the plant had voted by un overwhelming mnr-. gin for the Mrlke. Negotiations for renewal of a contract have been under way for a month. The management! will meet with the union s nego-1 hating committee tonight. OBITUARY grace: sampey Grace Sampey, lute reilden 200 East Main street, pis away In this city Friday nl at 1 1 p. m. following a brief ncss. She was born In Grec Colo., April 111. 11104, and a 37 years 8 months unci U d at the tlmo of her passing. I Is survived by her mother, Di Sampey of Redding; ono sis Stella Gattoll of Medford, I one cousin, Mable Gallon, i of Medford. The remains real the Enrl Whltluck Funeral Hoi Pine street at Sixth, wh friends may rail after 6 p. Notice nf funeral iirrangemc will he found elsewhere In I paper. FUNERAL GRACE SAMPEY Funeral services for the I Grace Sumpey, who passed aw in this city December 27, 19 will be held from the chnpel the Karl Whltloc-k Funeral Hoi Tine street at Sixth, on Tuesd December 30. at 2 p. in., Rev. Theodore Smith of the Fi Presbyterian church official! Services private, interment I committal services to follow Llnkville cemetery. RAISE WHOLESALE PRIC NEW YORK. Dec. 20 UV The American Tobacco Co. i noiinced Saturday that It h raised the wholesale price Lucky Strike cigarettes to $7 per 1000 from $6.53 ver 1009. The company said tha Increi of about 8 per rent was necessn because of Increased expenses. ye have received, freely give'' (Matt. 10:8). Among the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: "For ever, O Lord, thy word is settled in heaven. O how love I thy law! It is my medita tion all the day. Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path" (Ps. 119:89,97,105). The Lesson-Sermon also in ludcd the following correlative passages from the Christian Sci ence textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scrip tures by Mary Baker Eddy: "For three years after my discovery, I sought the solution of this prob lem of Mind-healing, searched the Scriptures and read little else, kept aloof from society, and devoted time and energies to dis covering a positive rule . . , The revelation of Truth in the under standing came to me gradually and apparently through divine power" (pg. 109). Aotv Playing, SAJICEL (I0IMVS PRESENTS 'NOW PLAYING" TWO COURAGEOUS PIONEERS ...fighting for tha right to Uv il Rainoui tHUS TUUflr -HIT No. 1- John Wayne, Ona Munson "LADY FROM LOUISIANA" HIT No, ! Roy Rogers "SHERIFF OF TOMBSTONE" TUESDAY- WEDNESDAY Shows 2, 7, 9 -HIT No. I- Man Will Do Anything for john tint ill rainicK hihut o'niiii OOf WOU .OUINH "l IOY" WIUIAMI -AUTION HIT No. i "FACE BEHIND THE SCAR" 1AM His way yog l-wyC' really Ion h J f 'Vlf urian in' jj I His lomoof tMj(rZtX LITTLE with IIE It II CRT II1IISIIII! mm ncBiii CMM-1VRJGIIT Dlrfcud or WILLIAM WYLER Blltrlbutad by RKO Radio PMurai Mai, 9 HI lo, 7iU-9i4J Pr,tnra at 1 ino-1 i?o.i ;-a ifts-ffl its f Moke a Date! rtjfSH JeJwl Join the Fun! i'y, TICKETS ON SALE Ajjju til A kt T. Pelican Theatre - Be With TiSa ...... . , wH S III? Wednesday, Midniie Free Hats Free Serpentine Free Balloons Free Horns FOR ALL! V 8tmtmtmmmromttmmrowtm Sina! Sinai Sina! HAPPY SONGS YOU mmmmmMttmnmnmmttMtitmnj and On 'lite Screen SLAP-HAPPY MAYIC I Ivf A u i n HAPPY NEW YEAR'S COMEDY HIT! DOORS OPEN AT 11:30 IWHATISTHIS POWERMAXIE HAS OVER WOMEN? wmmm 5 .iii.HI lULUL