PAGE FOUR THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH PALLS, OREGON March 18, 1943 FRANK JIKKINI . aULCOLW IPLET Idltor , Manaftaf Editor Pwbltihtd trtfy afUnioon wpi bunday bj Th Hart Id PuhllhIo( Companj Kaplaatdt ami rint tvrrcift, rtiainain fain, urtfon, HKKALD PUitLlSHINU COMPANY, PublUher UaUni U Mcond cUa matter at tht pottofflct of Klamath Fall a. Or, 00 Aufutl W, ivuo udqn act 01 oonftw, Harm 1 Member of Tha Aaaodatcd Praaa Tha Aiaoelatad Fraaa ) tie)uiTIjr cntttlrd to tha mi of rapoblleaUoa of all aa diipauoM crMiwa to 11 or oo oinenrii crraiwu w urn paper, aoa aiao ui Krai new publUhad therein. Atl tight of republication of apeelal dUpatclita art alM rcaarvrd, On Month Three UodUm One tu IIEUDER AUDIT BURKAD OF CIRCULATION Deiircred bj Carrier In City .TS I. Three Month! , (III Months Oa Year MAIL BATES PAYABLE. IN ADVANCE Fly Hall la Klamath, Laka, Uodoa and Staklyov CoonLUa prernted Nationally by tvaai-uoiiioay urx. iqo. 5.34 COO ftO Frandaco, Na Tort, Detroit, Beattla. Cbloago, PorUaad. Lot Anttlaa, 9. Loo I. VaoeMvar, B. O. Copies of The Neva and Herald, tocetber with complete Information about the Klamath Falla market, may bo obtaJord for the aeklag at any of tbeie, orftcva. i No Complacency Here THERE is nothing to this talk about complacency over the war insofar as it applies to the common run of folks in this territory. People here are not complacent. They are downright concerned with every phase of the war situation. We have reached the conclusion that the most dangerous attitude on the war is not down among the people with whom we walk and taiK in tnis western -J .... X J.1 community, out is way up ni me wp. i Take the matter of war production, for instance. There is everv evidence here that people are seriously disturbed over the situation. A man whose business takes him out among a great many people, both in town and out in the cbuntry. says the feeling over this matter is so intense and so general that he hardly talks to a person who does not mention it to him. These people working men, farmers, small business men are evidently way ahead of the powers that be at the top of labor organizations, industry and the govern' ment bureaus, in their attitude toward all-out production and the steps necessary to accomplish it. The common run of people think it is long past time to break up the deadlocks, the fight for power, the selfish attempts to "get all we can out of this" while the country's situation grows increasingly precarious. They think it is time to throw overboard theories of leisure and largess that were politically fostered for the last decade and have persisted into a period where we dare not be soft, where we dare not be leisurely, where we dare not waste tune in strug gles for profits or domestic power. We believe that if the men at the top would give the word for a change to "all out," they would be amazed at the response from the rank and file and the secondary leadership. If the men at the top would substitute that word for the flowery protestations of patriotism that flow so easily from them, the men down the line would de liver the goods if it meant the loss of all leisure. No, there is no complacency here. There is Instead a disturbed people, ready and willing to go all the way, waiting only for leadership to prove itself worthy in a time 01 tne greatest danger and stress. - - - ,. : News Behi Bjr Paul Wallon mm 3 A Names and Addresses A NUMBER of local people have evinced an Interest ri in writing their representatives In Washington with regard to the conditions m the country which are affected by legislative and other governmental activity in Wash ington. Requests have been received at this newspaper's office for the names and addresses of those representa tives, uere they are: - Senator Charles L. McNary, Senate Office Building, Washington, D. C. Senator Rufus Holman, Senate Office Building, Wash ington, D. C. Congressman Walter. M. Pierce, House Office Build ing, Washington, D. C. U. S. Bombers May Soon Aid RAF Offensive LONDON, March 13 (UP) American-made dive bombers soon will Join In the RAT tre mendous offensive against Ger man industry and German war. ships, which has been launched with devastating raids on the munitions center of Essen, the rmia industrial suDurbs and on three German battleships, relia ble informants said last night Britain will depend entirely on the United States dive bomb ers, which are expected to start coming soon, and will not pro duce any of that type of planes In this country, the Informants Bombs Dumped -"--i Meanwhile, the HAF's offens ive, with only occasional pauses because of bad weather, was gaining momentum .ith two ob jectives in view: (1) To give In direct aid to Russia by crippling German production; (2) To aid the royal navy directly In the battle of the Atlantic. Essen, and the surrounding Ruhr valley, have felt the full might of this new aerial striking force in three raids this week Air officials said that the havoc caused there was worse than anything evrr experienced in Britain. The great Krupp muni tions works drew most of the bombs, dumped by armadas of more than 100 huge planes. The German battleships Tir pitzn, Scharnhorst and Gnels enau, newest menaces to the al lied Atlantic shipping lines, al ready have come under attack and are being watched or hunted for future attacks. There has been no further word of the Tirpitzn since it was spotted and attacked off the coast of Norway Mondav morning. The Gnelsenau is at Kiel and the Scharnhorst at Wil belmsbaven, both suffering RAF bomb damage Inflicted during the year they were laid up at Brest, during their run through the English channel to home ports, and possibly durinff ralrf on their new anchorages. Courthouse Records THURSDAY Complaints Filed Purl Johnson Vermin Knnmno Box company. Suit to collect per sonal damages. Demands Judg ment against defendant In the sum of $18,000 and for further sum of $750. William P. Lord and Ben Anderson, attorneys for plaintiff. Justice Court Alford Smith. OVrlnflri1n0 true ana trailer. Fined $10. Howard E. Reeder, passing with Insufficient clearance Fined $5.50. Harold P. Brandness. Imnrnn.r tail light. Fined $5.50. Jerry R. Gibson, fmnnlno without license. Fined $25 and costs. WASHINGTON, March 13 Commcntative moping about Far East results seems to hold that campaign up as the feeblest- witted at all including Norway and Greece. The British lost their entire Malayan army at Singapore (the Japs say it numbered 78,000 on surrender day.) The Dutch, British and our own navy seem to have lost much of the Far Eastern fleet. The Dutch are supposed to have surrendered one army in Java numbering 03,000, although only untrustworthy Jap figures attain are available. Noting this evidence, current popular reasoning seems running along the line that Gen. Wa- vell's defensive strategy was stupid and that of the Dutch nearly as bad . . . 'Too little, too late," they say . , . "If these scattered 171,000 troops had been put together with all the scattered naval forces for a drive against the China coast the re sults might have been different, they say ... If ... If ... If. You can get nearly any better result than the one that hap pened by reshuffling strategy and forces on paper now, but all this discussion overlooks the basic reason why the Far East is gone. The original error was the fatal one, the all inclusive one which never could be redeemed. It was simply that the British and Dutch were sitting out there for years upon the richest por tion of the earth und failed to take modern precautions for its protection. Specifically they had no air force worthy of the name. They had not even built air fields enough to house an airforce if one came. If every allied plane in the world had been shipped out there last December 7, few could have gotten off the ground because no air fields for them had been built. - The British and Dutch had not provided sufficient anti-air craft guns to defend any vital point. Their troops were not trained to the type of warfare they would encounter, while the Japs had spent years preparing tor tnis special mission of con quest They simply, madly under-estimated what they needed and what the Japs had. These are fundamental mis takes which date back long be fore the fighting began. They could not be corrected In a few weeks or a few months. After them, nothing effective could have been done. SIDE GLANCES r CW. 1MJ BY WtA SsUVKC, IMC. T. ML BtO. U. . PJIT, Of. J- f J From Other Editors "Look at thai! After we haul him to the slntion on our tires all winter, he buys a bike the minute I suggest using his car a while 1" ALREADY WON IT Dismayed British and Dutch statesmen are Inclined, like the public now, to analyze events of the past three fighting months in search of the answer for their troubles, rather than these older and more important truths. it can be seen now the Jaos won the Far East before this war began when they took Indo China, with the placid acquies cence of Vichy. Without it their campaign would not have been possible. The British depended on Thailand to fight and par ticularly to offer air fields, but this error, too, proved disas trous. The Japs were halfway down the Malay peninsula be fore the British even knew where they would have to fight or how. The Far Eastern correspond ents talked of "reinforcements," I and the Dutch and British, ech- i oed this call, but everyone can now see 'reinforcements within the necessary 30 to 60 davs wa wholly impossible from the start. From San Francisco to Batavia is 36 days by convoy. A Jam-up occurred In our Pacific ports, due largely to a shortage of ships-available-on-the-spot, af ter the war began, but even if sufficient non - exfstant ships, planes, tanks, trained personnel Dial 5414 had been waiting in port to go to tlie outbreak of war, tiiey could not have altered the re sult in view of the original pre war mistakes. What couid have broken the back of the Jap offensive is naval blow at the Jap lines of communications, establishment of a beach head on the China coast, maintenance there of a force of dive bombers to prey upon Jap shipping. After Pearl Harbor, we did not have the navy to do it. CENSORS AT WORK These facts have been ob scured by the deceptive and childish modes of allied publicity and censorship such things as the Singapore censor suppressing CBS Correspondent Cecil Brown for hinting that Singapore was in a bad way only a week or so before it fell. They constantly held out hope to the public that Malaya or Java could be defended if only "reinforcements" could be sent, long after they knew reinforce ments were impossible, and that the Far East had been doomed by faulty pre-war preparations. The responsibi'ity was British and Dutch, not ours. That is the plain story of the Far East as history will write it. Ktatnath'ti Fiom the files 40 year )',, ogo-ond 10 years ago. , ABOUT OLIVES When It is picked, the so called "ripe" olive is green in color. It is placed in brine, al lowed to ferment for two weeks, and then treated with lye solu tion, after which it is exposed to the atmosphere, turning the olive black. The lye Is bleached out before canning. From the Klamath Republican March 13, 1902 The Ashland Record reports that J. Frank Adams and son, Will, took 26 fine horses to the L. A. Neil place near Ashland from the Adams place at Mer rill, making the trip in four days. The horses go to transfer companies at Seattle. - The Wood River sawmill has changed hands, the buyers be ing Howard Cunningham and Mr. Kingdom. Manly Whorton and M. R. Hart of Lakevicw soon will re ceive $100 reward each . for their part In the conviction of Bob Oglcsby, who robbed the Lakeview-Paisley stage line in December, 1900. From The Evening Herald March 14, 1932 Klamath Union high school basketball team has won its LET ALL KEEP FAITH1 (Mtmphls Commercial Appsal) The Commercial Appcul does not permit anyone who Is not a member of the stuff to write edi torials. There are many reasons for this rule, reasons too numer ous to recount hero. Toduy we suspend the rule to present as an editorial a letter from a member of the Arkansas Bar who served with the United States forces in tho first World war. An effort to interpolate or embellish would only servo to detract from tho elements of sheer foreefnlness mat nuiko it a document every thinking citizen of the.iu United States should read and ponder. The letter follows: 'To The Commercial Appeal: "My only son was horn while I wiis in France during tho tirst World war. Today lie is n mem ber of tho United States Marina corps. He sailed from Callfornlu the first of January, and we have heard nothing from him since. We know lie is somewhere in the Pacific. We aro anxious about him. Thousands of other parents are Uko in. "The president says we do not have enough shios to enH m. plies to our troops, and that wo must Duiid ships In u hurry. Even as ho sooku sevoml hi,,,. dred shipbuilders refused to worn on Washington's birthday because they were not i,i,l double time. How can fa(him n ,, ,1 mothers of boys who are In the danger zone and who ore being called upon to sucriflco their lives feel any 'surge' of unity when the president and the con gress Dormit n htuw-l, ..t .i.i.. I builders and munitions workers to quit when they get good and rendyT "Do our boys at tho front get 'overtime' and 'double time' In the fox holes of the Philippines? Do our sons who aro giving their lives to protect tho Jobs of these and others llko them quit on holidays? Llko hell they do! "One of my friends, who Is a good mechanic, with a family to support, wont to get a Job In a munitions plant. Every day wo hear on the radio and read In the newspapers that such men are needed to turn out munitions for our soldiers, sailors and marines. But this man was re fused a Job until ho could get a union curd. Ho could not get a union curd becauso he illil not have enough money to buy one. "Is It tho Idea of our govern ment that it Is more Important to preserve labor unions than It Is to preserve the Amerlcun Un ion? Why can't a freeborn Amer ican cltuen get a Job In a plant where the government needs workers without having to pay tribute to a high-powered labor j leader? "If our son i are to be drafted to glvo their lives for their coun try, why should not labor and capital lio drafted to supply them with munitions of war? Why should congress, which has tho power lo make laws, be so tender of the regard for laborer and management who work and prosper In safety while having an utter disregard for the lives of the boys at tho front? "Wo don't llko It, and we don't mind saying so right out loud. Mayhe It Is time wo wore elect ing soino senators and congress. men who will crucK down and compel capital and labor to get Into this war. And, enmo to think of It. this Is election year, and wo might us well get busy while we have the time and opportun ity." "JOHN C. SHEFFIELD,'' Helena. Ark. JJ TEA PLANTS All of the different kinds of tea come from the sumo plant, with the dltferonres being dun to the processes of culture and curing. way Into tho stato tournament again. The Klamath high school Krater today was declared one of the 35 best high school papers in the United States, in competition sponsored by Co lumbia university. Born to Mr. and Mrs. K. G. Klahn. a son. Weight 7 pounds 5 ounces. COMING SUNDAY ZESTFUL of X?-'J&&JZ 11 MIRTH! Take a Tip., it's Tops! ALIO Oral Wood Don Vou tJdom Im LatMl WorlJ Htm 1 PELICAN THEATRE POPEYE I CLUB SATURDAY MORNING 10 O'CLOCK Tom Keene IN "WESTERN MAIL" AND 6th Thrill Packed Chapter DICK TRACY VS. CRIME INC. COMING SOON TO THE anal fltfiP1 jtiw- tomoxto and aMu if Lot Warii n U MkAl "no -Oy" "1e . Dial 5414 VOX Saturday and Sunday Only Two Thrilling Action Pictures! GLORIA DCKS0N7pj AND ROY RflfiFPC In Republic's , an I-.': Mr mi ft WvJ-A rnur temper'" 'Mver io ' IS""1 tO " "', ,Never x . ,rojoeionl withow ROGERS mm: ADOIPHE MENJOU ceor6e MONTGOMERY trM Imaa Kt loci PM Ntwt Itti Mini Itiiiia frulif . driii ifiiim Ti Mm Kiln iimiui now DOQED.DE-MDQ now THE HEAT-WAVE'S HERE, FOLKS, AND IT'S KAY-IOSSAU Kay end John In feud to tit HnUh on how much ham toputln"Hnrnlot" ...and whose heart belongs to Glnnyl frrsrwta' MAY ROBSON PATSY KELLY ni KAY KYSEITS BAH0f Him BMIll, lb MibUt, Sulh Mm ADDED FOR YOUR M,ckey,1 B,1?da.y Port ENJOYMENTI ,., l'"" W TODAY and SATURDAY ETBflEOi TODAY and h SATURDAY ODDDD Ik aC?'JI ? The mzlng answer ' -tfijy V ' f'' 1 revealed In tht , ' MOST SHOCKING "fefc ' 7 PICTURE OF SECOND FIRST- Eddie FovJr in RUN FEATURE! . "COUNTPYAm.