The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, March 14, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE FOUR
THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
March 14. 11(42
fHAKK JSNKIXS .
iaicolm trttr
. . i , . titu
. tluvhi Editor
Publliflaa' mrj tfUrwou ateapt tJuaday by Tht Harald rahlUhltig Compaay al BspUoadf
. . and Pint HlmU, Klamath Palla, Oregon.
IIKIULD rullLISUIKO COllPAXV, IMbll.h.rt
katmd aj aaoood daaa mallar al tha nutorflra of RUmalh ralla, ora oa ausual W,
iwa uaaar act or eoniraai, aiarca a, laza
Mambar ol Tha AaaoalaUd Fraaa
Tha Atwalatad Praaa II aaeluaUalr ntlllrd t ttta aaa ol rapabtlaatlaa t9 all am
ditpaUhtl emdttad to H or aot othenriia eredltad IB thll papr, aad alto tha total
awi publllhtd tbaraln. All rtfhta of rrpulillcattoa of apadal dlkpatchaa ara alaa reaarvad.
News1
JUniNLH5fi
ay rAUL f JALLON
M under audit nuartAD or CIUCVLATION
Dallvared bj Camar ta Cttjr
Ona Month . . t .Tl
Thm Month! t.tl
Qua lrtar . 1M
MAIL RATRS PA V A rill IN ADVANC1
By Mall
la Klamath. Lata. Modoa aad SUktyoa OaunUaa
Thraa Mnntht
Sll Moatha .
Ona Year . too
Rrpwnttd Natloaattf by
Waat-Hollldu Co. lac
laa rraaolaaa, Wt Tort, Dftrolt, SaatUa, Oikafo, Fortlaad. Loa Aataiaa, BL took.
TaaooOTar, B. C Ooplaa Of Tna nawa ana Mrraia. kwiimt mi airapina iniwnuiwn
Bbool tha KlamaUi ralla tnartat. may ba abtalord for tha aaklas at any of tbaaa offtraa.
Weekend Roundup
COMMUNITY controversy, such as we have been having
in Klamath Falls the past few days, is occasionally
Inevitable. It is evidence of nublic interest in public bus!
ness, and there can be worse things than that In general,
it is fair to say that what has occurred here is a part of the
democratic nrocess.
Let us warn, however, against those who. secretly or
openly, like to agitate a fight "for the fun of it." There
is a danger that these people will have their fun at the
expense of somebody else, possibly those for whom they
profess to be agitating, we nave seen it happen.
Better keep it to a sincere expression of public interest,
looking to a constructive and fair solution that will leave
no permanent scars, and will do no unjust damage. That,
we believe, is a pattern to which all of us can subscribe.
At this point, let us say on the basis of a rather intimate
observation of the current controversy, that Charles Stan
field, the high school music supervisor, has refrained from
agitating the situation or stirring up feeling.
. The sentiment in evidence in Mr. Stanfield's behalf has
been for the most part spontaneous, springing from loy
alty, appreciation of his sen-ices, and admiration of his
work.
Our high school correspondent started his column yes
terday -with a remark which older people may ponder
with satisfaction.
He said: "This is America. If it wasn't the action
taken by the students Thursday would not have been
allowed.
Students at the high school, disturbed by an action
Dy the school authorities, were able to exnress their feel
ings freely in an assembly and by petition. There is a
lesson in Americanism in that
Klamath Sportsmen's association, In a statement of
poncy announced this week, struck a chord that will find
response in all loyal people.
The sportsmen declared their sunoort of nnv action
taken by constituted authority in protection of the forests
and other resources, even to the extent of closing various
areas or an areas xo nunting or rishing. In a country
where hunting and fishing is of such vital interest to a
great many people, that is a significant announcement
It was a loyal and creditable action, and we take pride
that it. originated in Klamath Falls.
There Is underway a serious study of policy In con
nection with the forest areas in the coming year.
It is possible that their greatest protection would not
be served by absolute closure, and competent forest men
are giving this possibility serious consideration.
It is clear to all that there is going to be a fire season of
great danger, and every reason for public cooperation that
has been quoted in past years is of greater importance
than ever this year. The action of the Sportsmen's as
sociation is evidence that the public is well aware of
that fact
WASHINGTON. March 14
-noosevcii resurrected
a lost chord the fear of Infla
tion In his farm speech, and
Mrs. Roosevelt's column a day
or so later said she now is in
favor of freezing prices, wages
and profits to dissolve that fear.
Such outward manifestations
usually reflect inner prepara
tions for action, and this time
they seem to forecast an imml-
nent presidential request to
congress for legislation to
freere the present circumference
of our expanding economic bub
ble.
What has warmed up this
subject, weeks after congres
sional and public demand
thinned out. is that Mr. Hen
derson apparently has found he
cannot do it his way. Piecemeal
restraints on a few "Important"
prices have not kept the general
price level from continuing to
rise. Informal price fixing lias
proved only a sievclike deter
rent, not a stopper.
The country meanwhile Is In
the midst of a period of plant
conversion from the making of
people's goods to war goods.
Less and less goods for the peo
ple are going to be available
from now on, but the people
(as a whole) have more and
more money with which to buy
goods they cannot get. The tax
bill, stiff as it is, and the war-bond-selling
program, good as It
is. are both insufficient to ab
sorb all this idle money.
Unanimity of official opinion.
therefore, is veering to long de
layed refrigeration.
SIDE GLANCES
mmm
STATE COMMITTEE
FBI fOUTH NAMED
"If we put your soldier friend in front of the mirror, he'll
be so busy admiring his new second liculcnnnt's uniform
he won't notice that we scorched Uie pie I"
People of the county, principally In the Bonanza
com
munity a-nA ,.. "jr;C C".
-ij-- li , . . UCJ nave contnDuted a con-
u,Z t PUrs wh,eh,J was fiven to Ur- and Mrs. Cecil
fire Mart week cWldren were burned in disastrous
bat,l.r!iri,r',?ehb0r,y S1 exemplifies the
Dest spirit of the community.
w.'wanny n0nTJet ul J885r anything about the weather.
howJLK wouldn't look very nice in print any!
MESDJlf NIGHT
BRIDfiECLUB MEETS
FORT KLAMATH Member
of the Wednesday Night con
tract bridge club were enter
tained for the regular bi-month
ly meeting of the group 0n
Wednesday evening, when Mrs.
Alfred Castel was hostess to
the club.
Two tables of contract were
In play until a late hour, when
irs. maon urattaln was given
high score and Mrs. wunm
Page, second high. Delicious re
freshment! were served her
guesis at tne close of the play
by Mrs. Castol.
Those Dlavlnff Inrliiitni Mr.
Jerry Sisemore, Mrs. William
ge, Mrs. joe Taylor, Mrs. El
don Brattaln, Mrs. Harold Wi
mer, Mrs. Fred Zumbrun and
Mrs. Castel.
Mrs. Pago will next entertain
the bridge club at her home on
the evening of March 25.
BELATED AWARD
CHICAGO (flO Henry (Cap)
Hertzlnger prizes a bronze
medal given him by the navy
department 40 years after he
had served in the navy. '
HerUingcr, 63, a foreman In
charge of Jackson Park harbor,
recently wrote the department
for record of his honorable
discharge. Enclosed with the
record was the unexpected
medal. Hertzlnger also was in
the navy in the World war. 1
Courthouse Records
FRIDAY
Complaints Filed
cawin ixgan versus California-Oregon
Power Co., South
ern Pacific Co., Central Pacific
Railway Co., Theodore R. Hugh
ey, J. C. Boyle. H. P. Bnswnrth
Jr, and L. W. Hutchinson. Suit
couect S41B.50 damages on
flood. A. C. Yaden, attorney for
Eloise Logan versus California
Oregon Power Co., et al. Suit to
coueci zoi damages on flood
AC. Yaden, attorney for plain
Herbert England and Caroline
tngiana versus California Ore
gon Power Co- et aL Suit tn
couect 3uoo damages on flood
A. C. Yaden, attorney for plain-
Henrietta Horn versus California-Oregon
Power Co., et al
Suit to collect S6568.76 damages
"to- xaaen, attorney
for plaintiff.
William Uhrman vorit' rn.
fornia-Oregon Power Co., et al
Suit to collect $26,265 damages
on flood. A. C. Yaden, attorney
v y mm.
Marriage License '
GORDEN-CARLKF.N v . j
Gorden, 41, Fort Klamath,
farmer, native of Oregon. Borg
hild Marie Carlsen, 20,' Modoc
Point, housework, native of
North . Dakota. . ,
CHASED WITH FEATHER
Mr. Henderson has been chas
ing prices with a feather. He
has worked this way:
When his scouts saw a cer
tain price rising above what
they thought it should be, they
Issued a warning to the indus
try say. for example, the waste
paper industry. A meeting was
called and generally an infor
mal agreement to hold various
prices was adopted.
If these continued to Increase,
as did wastepaper, he wrote the
industry a letter asking it to
freeze. If this did not work, he
issued a temporary regulation
good for 60 days.
When that failed, as it fre
quently has, he had to Invest!
gate profits, production costs,
etc., not only of that industry
but all related industries, be
fore he could issue an order ac
tually fixing the price of the
wastepaper. It is impossible to
do this with hundreds of thou
sands of products in their hun
dreds of thousands of stages.
Notable other Instances In
which this system has similarly
failed include certain types of
chemicals, used tires, rubber.
cigarets.
Only way to stop prices is to
stop them, and then start in
making corrections. But for
some reason Henderson does not
seem anxious to do that on his
own yet, wants a law to back
him up, a law which would ex
pand tne ireezlne to wages.
farm prices and profits, so as to
make It effective for national
economic results.
This viewpoint is likely to
come out Into the open when
nenaerson testifies about the
new tax bill before congress.
Larsons Receive Word Son
Interned Near Shanghai
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest T. Lar-ihal, China,
son Sr., of 146 Octavia street, ! general at
were encered tnis week when
they received news from the
United States marine corps that
their son, "Ted" Larson, Is well
though a prisoner of the Jap
anese forces near Shanghai,
China.
Following is the letter signed
Dy r-mmett w. Skinner, Lieut
The Swiss consul
Shnnghni reports
that he has learned thev are
being well treated.
The state department and the
American Red Cross are en
deavoring to make arrange
ments with the Japanese 'gov
ernment for the delivery of mail
and packages and as soon as
this arrangement has been made
SALEM, March 14 (!) Gov
ernor Charles A. Sprague Fri
day appointed a statewide com
mittee, headed by 11. C. Seymour
of Corvallls, stuto 4-H club lend
er, to dlrort young people In var
ious types of dcfeiiHu work.
The governor, asking all coun
ty defense councils to appoint
similar county committees, suid
youths will be given an octlvo
part in the civilian de(enso uro
gram, but that existing youth or-
ganirutlons will not bo Interfer
ed with.
Other members of the stoto-
wide youth committee:
Hex Putnam, Mule suuerln-
tendenl of public Instruction.
Suloiu; Adulph Holmer, execu
tive secretary, Eugene YMCA;
Mrs. George 11. Guthrie, north
west district of Camp Fire Girls;
Hulpli Dugdalc. suncrliittiiidunt
of Portlund schools; Edwurd
Curtis, regional executive of the
Boy Scouts; Mrs. Hlllman Lued.
denuiiin, member of the regional
committee of Girl Scouts; the
Rev. Arthur J. Sullivan, super
intendent of Cuthollc schools in
western Oregon; Arthur J. Mar
kewitz. executive commlttco of
Jewish youth; John Scott, itnto
representative for Junior Red
Cross; Mrs. Dulclna Drown, Ore
gon Council of Churches; Miss
Mayo A. Stclnmctz, secretary,
Boys and Girls Council; Miss
Dorothea Lensh, director of rec
reation for the Portland park
bureou; and Mlso Luzello Alway,
executive secretary of Girl Re
serves, all of Portland.
Smile When You Mail Thai
Income Tax, Brother; Your
Share Is None Too Heavy
Colonel of the marine corps in I you wiil be given full informa-
CREW SAFE' '
NASSAU. Bahnmna
14 VP) A submarine, operating
in Bahamian waters, xanir
freighter of unidenttflprt nnt.
ality Wednesday, but the entire
crew of 30 officers and omen
reached safety in Nassau.
TREASURY HIT
Government economists have
been cussing Uncle Henry Mor
genthau up and down depart
mental corridors for failing to
make his tax bill sufficiently
confiscatory of this Idle money.
His corporation tax would run
from 65 to 80 per cent on busi
ness profits and very heavily
upon professional and middle
class people, but the Idle money
is not in these hands. It is In
the hands of union labor and
the lower income factory
groups. Thus, while it Is the
oretically possible to dry up
Inflation with taxes, it Is po
litically Impossible.
Another thing which the gov- eyes,
Washington. D. C.
"Information has Just been
received that the members of
the marine corps stationed in
North China, who have been
made prisoners of war by the
tion.
This office is sure you will
appreciate the report concern
ing your son. Field Music First
Class Ernest T. Larson, Jr., U.
Mrs. J. W. Englond of Tulo
lake, homestead resident, re
ceived word this week from her
husband who Is employed as a
dragline operator for Walsh
Japanese torces, are Interned in i a prisoner of war since Decern-
camp in me vicinity of Shang-1 ber 8. 1941
S. marine corps, who has been i Drls5" Construction company
oi new xorK city in Trinidad,
eminent economists overlook In
considering the overall growth
of national income is that the
salary of the average white col
lar worker, the Income of the
doctor, dentist, storekeeper, pro
fessor, has not been increased,
while his taxes have been
trebled and quadrupled. Taxes
on all, designed to saturate the
Inflation income of the factory
group, would be indefensible.
a a a
RATIONING EYED
Rationing plus price fixing
might do the anti-inflation job,
but the government officials
seem unsure about overall ra
tioning. Vast mechanical organ
ization would be necessary to
effect it and enforce it. Details
would take a long time to work
out. At least, these are the ob
jections cited by government
authorities and likely to guide
Mr. Roosevelt s decision.
a a a
F. R.'S JOB
Before any step can be taken
however, it is evident the gov
ernment will have to coordin
ate its price-treasury-wage-agri
culture policies. The only one
who can do it is Mr. Roosevelt
himself.
So far, Morgenthau has been
making tax policy, Henderson
price policy, the farm bloc and
lobby the agricultural policy,
and the labor unions the wage
policy. The interest of each is
conflicting with all the others
and the whole.
Morgenthau wants revenue,
Henderson wants all prices
down, agriculture wants all ex
cept farm prices down, labor
wants farm prices down, its own
wages up. The governments
economic program has grown
like four Topsies.
You need not be an econo
mist to see the situation is explosive.
Joe Vlncze, named by the
grand Jury in a secret Indict
ment returned at its last session
In January, Is in custody here,
charged with forgery.
Vincze was arrested in Baker,
according to Sheriff Lloyd Low.
H. D. Mackcy, also charged
with forgery, was committed to
the county jail Friday in default
of $1000 cash or S2000 proper
ty bond.
BWI.
Mr. and Mrs. England were
married In Eugene in 1027, and
came to Tulclak where they
took over a homestead. Eng
land has worked for 12 years
with the US reclamation and
biological services as dragline
man and is well known In the
southern section of the basin.
The Englands have three chil
dren, Mory, Roberta and Walter.
Mrs. England plans to remain
on the homestead where sho
has leased the land.
VITAL STATISTICS
FREER Born at Klamath
Valley hospital, Klamath Falls,
Ore., March 14, 1042, to Mr. and
Mrs. W. L. Freer, Keno, Ore., a
girt. Weight: 8 pounds 8
ounces.
Depending on the species, sol
ders have from two to eight
TODAY and TOMORROW
bib hits
y Roy Middleton
Otto Kruger
Roy Rogers "
"BAD MAN "MERCY
r OF ISLAND" """T
LV. DEAD- J Zmru-dJi
NOW PLAYING!
I
IT'S KAV-LOSSAl!
IT'S KAY-RIFFICI
A Jamming, Joyous
jamDortcl 1
bar
JOHN BARRYMORE LUPE VELEZ GINNY SIMMS
. .iyXvR5?PK KELLY a PETER UND HAYES
ana tAi KYSER 3 BAND homing H.trr Babbitt, ! Katitbla. 8.11, Hatoa
- ADDED Mickey's Birthday Party
JOYS! Rolling Rhythm
Last Minute World News
COMING SOON
r
ooiMi itoMt
MENJOU-MONTGOMERY
ltM wm W tau . nt Urn
iltllllM.llia'rlii.IM,
trlH Tl Hifll . liinl,!
By BOB LEONARD
Smilo when you mall that In
come tax, mister.
Grin becauso you're glad
you're sacrificing.
You think It's too much? You
with your time and one-half,
you with your cost plus, and
you over thero griping about
your worn tires?
Come with iio to wlu-io a
bunch of Klamath kids Oils wvrk
gave up their freedom so thut
you might keep yours, gambled
their future so thut yours inny
bu secure, prepared to lay tholr
lives on the line so that your
return will bo a life worth liv
ing. Come with me. all three of
you, to tho ormory where U2
guys have 'topped worrying
about taxes, tlmo and one-half
and cost plus.
Whero there are 132 guys who
have only to think about the
clean rip of a Jap buyonut, tho
ragged tear of (lying shrapnel,
or tho maiming bln.it of u demoli
tion bomb. Who aren't con
cerned with their shuro In the
future but only determined thut
thcro will be one for you with
your tlmo and one-hulf and your
cost plus.
One-hundred und thirty-two
guys who aren't willing to aid
the war effort Just to get their
cut. Who have no ten per cent
to gain and only their lives to
lose.
Stand here with me. mister,
and try to pick 'em out of that
subdued crowd of mothers, sons,
fathers and wives. Maybe you
can. They're not tnlklng much.
They're not talking for the
press and ballot box. They're
planes, guns, tanks, unity and
votes.
Itut they know that you know
t!uy need 'em, Not votes nor
bundles unless It's bundles of
bombs. And thuy'ro trusting
Unit you'll gut 'em.
Without waiting for your tlm
and one-hulf and your cost plus.
Gain at 'em, mister. With all
your eyes open. Don't flinch
from your feeling when you
pot tho guy who's boon your
fishing partner for summers puat.
Just think a little deeper- and
prrhup u little different.
Don't duck Inside yourself
when you wonder what thut
stolid, unblinking Indian mother
Is thinking and know full well
all the time. Think of your son
and think of your time and
one half and your coat plus.
Don't hide from your thougliU.
mlxti'r. Don't avoid the eyes of
that slender hid who's left his
druitstoro In the hands of hi
wife for the duration. Meet 'em,
ml.itcr. like he's meeting tho
ryes of his wife, your wife, and
the world.
Meet the Impact of all of
Ihrni All of the H2 you so
and the i:i2.Du and more that
I you don't soe.
The i:i2,0()0 and mora who
figure that strulght time is too
much who only hope there's
tlmo enough left. Who flgura
that cost their Uvea ar sec
ondary If tho flnUhrd Job Is
right.
Meet 'em and then turn In
side and meet what you find
there. You with your time and
one-half and your cost plus.
Think of It when you mall
that Income tax and take It
, not publicly calling for ships, from there, mister
COMING SUNDAY
Kothorino
Hepburn
Carry
Grant
In
"BRINGING UP
BABY"
and tho Hlgglns Family
In
"MEET HE MISSUS"
V:7
I DIAL
I 3562
tost Times Tonight
SECOND
FEATURE
EDDIE FOY, JR.
In
'COUNTY FAIR"
Sunday Monday Tuesday
A KERRY MAD-CAP MUSICAL MASQUERADE!
WITH THPBP 1
Dogs You Seldom See
Craig Wood
'FEATURE" SHORT 8UBJECTSI
Fire Chief
Latest News