I i PAGE FOUR THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON March 11, 1942 In It MARK JBttCTXI , AlALCOLM KPtKT HbllBhtd 9fi7 afUrnooa pt Sunday br rnu inn nirc-i, iMmain rana, urrgon. " HKHALO PUBLIKIIINO COMPANY, PublUhert BnUrl m Moood eiau matur at tht a iwn unati act or Member of Tht Awodattd Prtaa TIm AiaoHattd ftM h neluilTttr n titled to ttit ota of mabtlatloa of all diapatcoea ertdttcd to It or not othanrist 91 puDManta uitmn. am niiu oi repumrcawoa oi ipcciw ai-paicnra mn ia rf Tru. T MKMBSR AUDIT BUBKAD OF CIRCULATION Dallnrad 6j Curiae ta CUj 0r Month 1 lyr alonth . Ou Yaar - MAIL EATM PATAHLB M ADVANCB Br Mall la ClaaaUi. Lata, llodoa and SUkirou CoaoUa T$aa Month , lf Month Of Vur Rtpretfrntad waat-Homaaj uo u& M rrueUM, KflV Tori, Datralt, htUe, ChMfo, Portland, Lot AaltlM, It. ImU, Vatooouvar,- B. a Gopla of Tot Km tod Herald, toftther with couplet laformatlo about Ilia KlaiaaUi Falla Marital, ma; ba obuload for lb aakla at aaj of tbaaa oifkaa. pefense Activity in Second District A RECENT announcement by Congressman Pierce that an army depot would be located in the second con gressional district was released at La Grande. Mr. Pierce & the time said he did not know just where in the district the depot would be situated but there have since been reports that La Grande is considered as a site, while one published story was that the depot would be placed some where near the Pendleton-Hermiston area. It is a matter for consideration of people in this sec tion of the second congressional district that there has been a concentration of defense activities in the north eastern part of the district. The south central and south western section of the district has gotten comparatively little, while the northeastern area has been made the site of an airbase and a huge ammunition dump. Recently another airbase was located just across the line in Walla Walla, in the- same general area. Direct defense con struction in other parts of the district has been confined largely to CAA airport development. There is interest m this community in bringing a de fense activity into the area. 'There has been little senti ment here for an over-size development such as a can tonment which promises unpleasant after-effects. What ia most generally hoped for here is something for which tljis locality is well suited through its transportation and communication position, its proximity to the ocean, etc. jibs not gone unnoticed Dy tnose working for the welfare oj this community, such as the chamber of commerce and city-wide airbase committee.- Aviation development hs received major attention, and in the adjoining Mal lon column today there is significant mention of this com munity as an air-base site m connection with a discussion of red-tape delays. The situation here is fundamentally sound, because Klamath's agriculture and lumbering, bulwarks of the community's economy, have continued on a most active basis. Nevertheless, the location of a modest but sustain iife defense activity in the area would be welcome and no community would be found more cooperative as a site for such a development. , A, aeiense activities, rather than their- concentration in sin gle areas, would bring this community more definitely irfto the picture. I ;. . -rrr- - I $ Money Well Spent ; KLAMATH'S Boys' club, on Klamath avenue, has been performing a most worthwhile service to the youth ol the community. It provides boys with a place to play atd loaf, where the atmosphere is wholesome and in viting. Its establishment two years ago came in answer W a long-felt need. t Boys have beetf using the club. Daily attendance runs to 80 and 90 boys. - Operation of this club costs from $1000 to $1200 a year. It is money well spent, and there should be no dif ffculty in finding sources for continuing support of this fiie program. -'i ' IUUI0K VETERAN HGIZES DEFENSE - pTLLAMOOK, Ore, March II vn A guerilla band, 1000 strong, organized by a blind vet eran of the first World war. Der- fetted plans Tuesday to support " army in fighting off any in- Biiempi on the Oregon coast . ptewari .Arnold, the veteran, who lost his sight but not his " me first AEF, said 24 cofcipanies of guerillas had been formed. Only a few more are nepded, he said, to complete de fense plaij for this rich coastal dairy community. J'We're just sort of backing up JJH,8"?1" Arnold explained. V" 1" big country and a rough country, and we can help guard it.f . . jYoods-wlse loggers, farmers anp townsmen have Joined, each wearing on enlistment to de fend until death the green hills nd valleys stretching back from Tillamook bay, Xhey provide their own rifles NOWt"e RAINBOW Hollywood's New ', Sensation George Montgomery In uEOMni ' Ma a MONTGOMERY 1HASSEN wm iuu . ecu WXJGHT, Jr. . UuMlBf Editor Tht Harald pablithtag Oompuf at Bipluad poatoffto of KUiutth Fill, Or, oa Auguit Jtt. con(ra, aiarrn a, iit ertdiUd la this paptr. and alto tht local -I ,n - La -MB s-xJ Kattoaall by protection from the coast yet The matter of the army depot policy ol decentralization of and ammunition. They have no uniforms and they do no drilling, They intend to fight, as the In dians did before them, from the sandpits and cliffs along the ocean and in the timbered moun tain passes leading inland. Four retired army majors have helped lav defenu ninn. and once a week the companies, organized by groups of 30 to 70 men, meet for target practice. "oi inat tnese bovi nwi much practice." said ArnM 'It's Just to keep their eyes share so we won't waste powder." Aimosi as teared as invasion is enemy incendiary bombing of the forest back of the hnv of the last great virgin timber stands in the country. The guer illas have manned off ,.. for each company to guard. They have pl-dged also to help farmers get in" their crops despite what threatens to be come the worst agricultural labor shortage In history. But first of all. Arnold said. they are brush fighters. "The army probably will take care of the Jarjs If thv trv in land on the beaches," he added. out our boys will be pleased to meet any who might slip through into the woods." The Second Feature Brings You CONRAD NAG EL - - and - Eleonor Hunt in ' "GOLD RACKET" Newsv Behind WASHINGTON, March II Congress is handling the Morgcnthau tax program as an Incendiary bomb. It is advanc ing slowly with black glasses. and overcoat on backwards, looking for a sandbox. On their private pads, ways and means committeemen have discovered the total tax on some corporations would run from 65 to 80 per cent. One senator fig ures that if General Motors earned $240,000,000, it would be lucky to have half of it ($120, 000,000) for dividends, which would mean a sharp cut in earn ings distribution. Most of the taxmaking lee is lators think the . income rates proposed are fa "too high to maintain popular . enthusiasm. Nor do they like the substitute ideas of a sales tax or a with holding tax any better. This overall dissent is too widespread to warrant any Dre- dictions on the final form of the bill yet. STOCK TREND Drooping of the stock market, in the face of this tax threat, again raises a fine question of government publicity emphasis and public morale. In the last war, decline of the stock market would have been considered a bad sign. Public confidence x-as supposed to follow the market. Not so now. Most administra tion authorities discredit the stock market as an influence on public opinion on the ground that stocks are narrowly held. That may be, but the govern ment is also relying on sheer patriotism, unstimulated bv anv jre personal interest, to spon sor enthusiasm for the war effort in many other ways (crowding of little business, prices, ration ing sugar, tires, labor's prior ities;. Abandoning the old profit mo tive tor stimulating of the ut most national productive energy ana eninusiasm, the Question arises as to whether an adequate lUDsmute nas been provided to furnish the same full sour. Is personal Incentive being blunt ed: is tne maximum drivine force of the nation being main tained? . , - No one here seems worried. They expect to get the produc tion Job done better than plan ned. Yet the cumulative effects ofl the public mind of the pecul iar new hope-killing' ways in which the government, through roeessiiy, is going, about the purely non-military asoects of this war, may be' a subject for investigation by "Mr. MacLeish. KF PROJECT, INVOLVED ' Wrath is rising In the war department at delay In getting new air fields- started, weeks and months after the decision to build them has been an nounced. Temperature around air corps headquarters here Is TODAY THE MOST ROMANTIC ROT SINCE tVE GAVE ADAM THE APPLESAUCE 1 "fcj2j T a")J I rjlH jpa VmmmM jaataVlataSairaalalWBaWN ST ' III i jtsfci LUPE VtLEZe i 4 ' J0t . STEEDS and TROUBLE IN GOING PLACES and c aVv. mStm4 SIDE GLANCES CO- W3 1Y HT-A WVXI. IHC. T. M cq U t- tAT, OfF. - J "If you're in doubt cull him and General so high that the staff has been warned, upon threat of court- martial, not to talk. All types of red Utoe. result ing from conflicting authority between the air corps and en gineers, is responsible in some instances. Projects involved: Rapid City, Pueblo. Klamath Falls, Richmond (Va.), Topcka, Lompoc Maria (CaU, Greenville (S.C.), Hattiesburg (Kiss.), Fort Worth, Spokane. Congress appropriates monev for the fields and then the army decides the exact site. This de cision is generally announced through senators and representa tives, in order that they may get publicity back home. But politics about the choice of local land sometimes becomes involved. Then the air corps and engineers are supposed to inspect the site and agree on in stallations, but agreement has not been easy. It has been four months since the Greenville project was an nounced, three months since Lompoc Maria, two since Pueblo, Rapid City and Richmond yet work has not started. In another case, the army planned a field at Vero Beach, Florida, but- the navy claimed this was too near one of its fields, and forced the army to move 25 miles south to Ft Pierce. - - THIRD HIGHEST In the United States, cerebral hemorrhage has a death rate of 85.7 per 100,000 of the oodu- lation, and ranks third in causes of death. Efficient cooline of the en. gine is impossible if. dirt blocks the air passages of the light met al tubes of the radiator which carries the water. AT THE Git dtllrkia tcitb Dmsjm Ctt laughing with Laugbltnl Grt nmtntic with Robirtl 0L Jul 111 IV iflYf 1 1 4 it-PIMMV ClllllPi ffiSfSSSRC .a III M for Good Measure! ' STEERS , STORE LATEST NEWS Admiral if he's a Navy man, if he's Army." Courthouse Records TUESDAY Complaints Filed Florence N. Mascotto versus Paul L. Mascotto. - Siut for di vorce. Couple mnrricd in Red wood City, Calif., March 2. 1940 Plaintiff charges cruel and In human treatment and asks cust ody of minor child. J. C. O'Neill, attorney for plaintiff. Montgomery Ward and Co versus Tom Lang, Bcrnico L Lang and Ellsworth Lang. Ac tion to recover property. Clar ence Humble, attorney for plain tiL'. Marriago License CRAPO-DAGGETT. Paul J. Crapo, 23, Klamath Falls, ac counting clerk, native of Wash ington. Billie Caroline Daggett. 21, Klamath Falls, student, na live of Oregon. i 1 " n i I, ,i 0kPff PELICAN! ' tTQ : W IX ":r '4 X I " Ko' and hl ploymdw boat. "SrVv X 1 - 'A& 'JLf 1 1 lnfl out Sholtpjar alght lo the l " -V 1 ' ' VfW?; Vhjj ba'-'n o rhythmic, roaring, romorv Jjyf' iCr V r tv'r ,ie MM,0B wl,n Borrymor on ' A .7" J'' aN'' ,n lom froma boll-flghllnglopo... ' ; ' Wh f Xn V i'S,' "1tl and 0inny mmorlng as she tings. Tim Hwmw l rl l :-;-yW;-:K f'S l&rf,' II I ,13 J UTIST ' ' I 111 MtrnZsh : , - news . I Telling The Editor Utttr prlniM htrt mmt not tit nwr titan M0 won In .until. ntiMi i writ tMt Itaibly on ONQ iiui 0l tht tpr only, a ltd mul b flid, Oontilhuiloit loiiowinjt ttiHi ruloa, r war nil y w torn. LABOR AND WAR KLAMATH FALLS, Oru. (To tho Editor) The lubor situation at thu Tulo lako s u m p Job should open tho eyes of the citi zens of this community to tin: doplomblo condition existing all over tho United States. Tho man belonging to the labor unions uru patriotic, in most cases und arc willing to work and coqperate, but the lubor leaders such as Joe Willis, who is in u smull way a goutl ex- ample ot tho big shots In labor, give up any of tho advantages tlicy have gained. In order to get this war won, we have to have materials and we cun not get them as long as lobor sabotages war industries with strikes und arguments. One strike In a vital defense plant was . called because the men were not allowed to smoke on the Job. Such practice as this will not be tolerated much longer and if congress docs not do anything about It the people will. If labor is not willing to do Its share in winning this war. then labor will huvc to be drafted. This will be Just us fair as drafting the boys for the armed services. Getting back to the Tule lako Job. the land that this Job will release for agriculture is badly needed and should be made ready If it is humanly possible, regardless of union agreements or commitments to the OPM or anybody else. The people of the United States are not going to sit sllll and see our war efforts made in vain, Just to kctp a few men In power in tho labor rackets. who aro not patriotic or big enough to put union industry In to this fight wholeheartedly and wipe out the 40-hour week and overtime for the duration. Sincerely yours. JOHN COOPER. Looking for Bargains? Turn to the Classified oaae SPHAGUE CULLS FOR SALEM, March 11 (AP Governor Charles A, Spragt'.s asked chnlimon of county dlvil Ion defenso councils Tuesday to appoint county salvage commit tees of five to nine members each to begin Immediately to collect waste In tho "salvage for victory program." "In our total effort for total victory, every pound of waste material must bo salvaged," the governor said. Ho listed tho following item us examples of the kinds of waste that is wunted: Scrap metals iron, steel brass, Conner, aluminum, lend. discarded tools, metal bods, railings, tire chains, pots and pans, picture frames, hangers. lonmpasio containers, pipe and nnrnwarc, naileries, and uny- iiung i iso made of metal, except tin cans. Waste paper wrapping pu per. cardboard cartons and boxes, paper bugs, newspapers unci magazines. Old rubber discarded auto tires and tubes, rubbers, over shoes. Old rags cast-off clothing, burlap bugs, draperies, mat tresses, pillows and discarded carpets. In nil cases, the governor said, citizens are instructed cither to sell waste materials to a col lector, or give it to charities, schools or other organizations which collect It. Ho risked that wherever possible, people tnke their wnste to dealers to rellove the strain on collection facili ties Governor Spragun asked thot county defenso councils, after selling waste materials, Invest the profits In defense stamps or bonds. MOTHLES3 There were no moths or but- terfllM during the Great Coal Age, when many other Insects flourished, because the flowers upon which these nector drink ers depended had not yet ap peared IIVILffS MtoP.iiMiHi'l'rl .IliAil'i'll..: From The Klamath Republican March 13, 02 The Ashlnnd line started the mull from here on horseback three times last week on ac count of d e o p snow on the mountains, but Is now making rogular trips with wagom, the roads being much Improved. a a Tho following men were vic torious in the town election Monday: Trustees, Alva Beats, George Hum, John Campbell, Joseph I'lnrco and Win, Terrlll; recorder, Fred Schallock; treas urer, J. W. Siemens. a The action against Dr, W, H. It. Huff, tho Quaker doctor, was held In Justice HuttonV court, and a verdict of acquittal returned. He was charged with practicing without a license. a a a From The Evening Herald March 11, 1933 One hundred twenty-five em ployes of the county school sys tem were given a 15 per cent wage cut today. a a a Louis Polln, Chlloquln mer chant, will open a store here. a a Six Klamath young people wero Injured, one fatally, when their automobile struck the cen ter support at Esplanade and the S. P. tracks early today. Ed ward DeSpaln was the fatality. Others hurt wero Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dnlton and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McCulloch. ELUSIVE MOTIVE OTTUMWA. Ia.. MO Bob Heath doesn't know whether it was misguided patriotism or plain sabotage. lln purchasad a large Ameri can flag and polo and placed them In front of his store. The flag was stolen. Water In an automobile en gine is not to keep the motor cool, but to keep It from be coming excessively hot.