PAGE FOUR
THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
April 21. 1041
SIDE GLANCES
Cum hiiki ,
AlOOLM IPLIT
, MuldM I4IMC
HMuM mrr iXmooi amrpt SmSa; by TIm IhiM PnMWitai Onrui u IpUaa4a
and Ptaa Hlmti, Klaaiatli falla, Oraio.
1RALD fUBLISBINO COMFaXY. PsblUlMM
atons u aaeooa thai mattat al Of poatamea af Klanata falla. On, aa Aafut M,
IMi uodar act el oootraaa. Mirth a, l(
Mambar of Tht aaaoetatad PrcM
mmbe"aud)i burkao or cibculatioh
DallTarad bj Cam, b Cltjr
Om Meet .
Trim llooUu . l
Om Iw - . IJQ
MAU UIEI FAVAtU.l IN ADVA NCI
to Klanatk. UK Wodoa ud iullroa CouUao
Trma Moathj tt.
III Moatha S.M
Om rw LOO
SrpraaaiUd NatloaaJrt by
Watt-HollldAf OO- 1HL
aa traaelaaa, Kt Tort, tftrott, rVultK CliHato. rcrtlud, loo AonlM. M. look,
Vaaeouvar, B. a Capiat ol Tha Km ud Rtrald, toftlbw vllb ooapltta taforaaalM
about Iba Xlanalb Falla aiarttt, may ba obuiatd for tbo aaktas at oaf ol tbaaa affleaa. I
Th- annut4 Praaa u aidmlvclr aatltM to tha bu ol faaublkaOoa of all
tfiapatcbai orodtud to It or aot etbarvlaa erdltd ta tbli pPr. tod olao tbt local I
ban oubllabad tharata. All rlfhla ol rapublicaUoa ol ipaelal duptlcbaa an alaa ratarrad.
White Farming This Year
FORTUNATELY, It appears there will be no crop dis
ruption in the Tule lake basin this year because of the
Japanese evacuee camp being constructed there.
Farmers in that area are now working their land, and
the 1942 crops are going in. It will be at least SO days
before the Japanese camp is constructed, and it would
probably be twice that long before evacuees could get
going on any kind of an agricultural program. That would
be too late in the. year.
- The time for starting the great production program in
the rich south end of the Klamath basin is now, and the
white farmers of our area are doing it They will make
it count as one of the greatest productive years in the his-
tory of our regional agriculture.
What will happen in another year may be a different
story. Official announcements of the plans for the camp
have indicated some 6000 acres "will be developed" for
the use of the Japanese to be assembled at the camp. This
may affect plans for homesteading some 7500 seres of
the Tule lake basin this year. It may change the character
of the fanning program m that area.
But in the meantime, the watchword for 1942 is all-out
eowtnlbTiaiaatavict.iwc. T.M. ata n. a. ht. oar. ' f.
"Dad's a good soldier and he ought to know, but mavbe
he was only kiddinc when he wrote about General Ndio-
Arthur being cnury about carrots and cauliflower 1" ,
By RmjlMallon .
J reduction by white farmers to help win the war against WASHINGTON, April 21
apan and ita allies. I The manpower rnobiHzer,
Dogs Face Dull Days
nut jacNun, nu dona a spec
tacular Job of fighting, his way
up toward the presidential elec
uons of 1B44 an event of
WW 4-dTa V -oVdk UVKm TV 14 Is U IIQIV VCU BUIUUK UIO 11 CCDk UVKD I
IV I., xv. a..TJ - i e i; :i. . j i n i I
ia uio wunu. iato iwu muuuia 01 iuniicu acuviiy. dc i uu ui j i i -
fffnninff May 1. On that date, a city ordinance decrees
that owners shall keep their dogs up on their home prop- based on his old Indiana uber.
erty. This will continue in effect through May and June, tutorial record. But a few days
ine garden -growing season" here. Un July 1 will come pack a news photo of him was
mancipation of the canines. distributed, taken at Pittsburgh,
The date for these restrictions, we suspect, has crept i"??0 r.UUam
np without a great many dog owners realizing what must :h"JS2
be done under the ordinance Now comes timely warning "tSS
w Kviivu uiyaiuiicuw nccuiiiK UUK9 in I.UU1U1C arminri a a o
yd uvo nwwiut,co, bciiaiu AabuibicB uiat i jtf McNutt'f new Job how
re lacxmir on tne pronemes 01 door owners who have 4i .. t..
alwaya permitted their pets to roam at large. Jhrarda of poUUcal popularity
. ine aoir orainance was Daased matir months airo. it at we civilian defense cost
was well publicized at the time, and it went through the which Mayor dUGuardia
u mini wppHv rAriinor Thar a van via nMfM4-. I back. The drafting of men for
remember,' while, on the other hand, city authorities have L give.hlra chan,ce
for tmm mi1a;i,fa mn. U-.- i. me mllUon of new people;
ind";VgetebTe VardTn
by does. 14 Involves a delicate process
So carefree days for local doers will be snsnpndpri for oirina m.n 4.v .J
a. while. Wise and sympathetic owners will arrange now putting them into another, help
to make their confinement as pleasant as possible. tag one industry and hurting
another, and it is entirely a new
People Will Like It
UNDEB current consideration by the local school boards
is a plan whereby Buck Hammer, the high school
iwmaii coacn, win Decome coordinator of physical edu
idea to which the country has
not been accustomed as it has to
military drafts.
Mr. Roosevelt has SDoarentlv
delegated the whole touchy
problem of policy t ormaUon (the
cation for all of the schools of the communitv. Jn. pv 5" -lm.?tci"est on. f. h?w
now on the high school staff, will be supervisor of thto to Ws rising Ste artval in
work m the high school and Paul Angstead, now the the new deal, and h blard"
elementary school physical education supervisor, will con- with a little private advice from
tinue in that position. the White House on the side, no
inis program, we anHeinate. win mf .ui, i aouot.
approval. obviously Mr. McNutt could
Hsmnior PoaVa Aw..j . v.v . W?T mm8e11 " a backseat
at. . , . , -: . " f'"cu wunoui very mucn trouble.
themselves in the local system. The physical education
should continue and develop along sound lines under their PINCH coming
before
PIEPER RESIGNS
ASHLAND, AprU 21 OP)
Dean Pleper, manager of the
Ashland chamber of commerce,
resigned Monday to become sec
retary of the Redding, Calif,
, c'-ber.
Pleper, who has- been mana
ger here since September, 1940
McNutt will
the end of the
year, when a general labor
said his resignation will be effec- have developed in 'some lines
tive May 18. He said he also is 01 kule work and in some lo-
reslgnlng as secretary of the Ore
gon Commercial Secretaries as
sociation, a post to which he wis
elected a week ago Saturday.
FUNNY BUSINESS
"He soys everything would figure out okay if he got a
captain's pay 1",--
calitles already.
In cities where they are large
plane plants, Baltimore, for in
stance; on the west coast;
Bridgeport, Conn.; Norfolk,
(shipbuilding); Wichita, short
ages already are being report
ed. Needed most are tool design
ers, tool makers, machinists,
welders.
Training programs are going
on, but there is also a certain
amount of labor pirating. Cases
have been discovered of a man
ufacturer going to another city
and running a blind want-ad for
certain types of workers.
In September and October.
when the crops are comina in.
and the conversion of industry
to full war-gait will have been
fairly well completed, the pinch
will begin.
GRIEF ASSUAGED
The grief of Sidney Hillman
(once alter-ego of William
Knudsen in war production) at
navlng his ego tossed around in
the reorganization which left
Donald Nelson on top, has now
been assuaged. Hlllman's resig
nation, placed quietly on Mr.
Nelson's desk some weeks ago
and never officially reported,
has been rejected.
He Is to be the Harrv Hon.
kins of labor for the president,
a special adviser. His duties will
be a secret between him and the
president. a
The president .could not give
him the manpower mobilization
post he wanted because of oppo
sition in both AFL and CIO
camps.
a
DISAGREEABLE QUESTION
A spat has developed among
the president's advisers over the
freezing of wages. His war labor
board is still granting Increases
in some specific instances,
thereby running counter to what
obviously is the general policy
to hold them down by indirect
pressure.
But a new grouo is rlslni
Inside to advocate that any nec
essary wage readjustment be
paid in the, form of government
bonds, redeemable after the
war. This would circumvent the
inflation argument, and please
Messrs. creen and Murray who
are working against any freez
ing.
All factions know somethinc
must be done, but the question
is distinctly disagreeable here
politically.
EMBARRASSING
Itjlooks like the. Japs got all
tangled up in their radio mo
rale planning just before our
first bombs hit them. On Tues
day they denied as "an infa
mous lie" a statement attribut
ed to Reuters, British news serv
ice, stating they had been
bombed. They said Reuters had
faked the statement to bolster
British morale.
That made it doubly embar
rassing for them five days later
when the infamous lie c
true.
The way they said it also let
us know they did not expect
any bombing, did not think it
possible. That told us the time
was ripe.
Funny part of it is, Reuters
never carried any such state
ment. Could it be that the Japs
fell for some elusive bait to tell
us what we wanted to know?
GITlf FATHERS
DISCUSS
E
NFOiiCEINI
There may be some danger
in over-interpreting the bomb
ing raid on Japan as the await
ed opening of our big offensive.
Technically, it must be accept
ed mainly as an extension of
our harassment raiding like
the blows levelled at the Mar
shall, Wake, Marcus and New
Guinea islands.
It represents offensive and In
spiring action, but the big of
fensive drive will require a lot
of material to be marshaled at
far-away corners of the earth.
Generally it is anticipated for
next year.
ONE THAT DIDN'T GET
AWAY
SALT LAKE CITY, (TV-Ted
Heath wishes this fish story was
not true.
The 12-year-old youth was
fishing from a train bridge when
he heard a locomotive whistle.
Ted ran, but as the train
neared, he leaped IS feet into
the water.
He finally swam to shore, his
leg broken from striking a plank.
Co-operating with the Amer
ican Red Cross, the American
College of Surgeons has urged
its members to participate in the
first aid program and to Interest
other physicians In the new un
dertaking.
Klamath Falls dogs are con
fronted with two months of
close confinement, beginning
May 1, and city councllmen at
last night's meeting made plans
for enforcement of the oral
nance.
The councllmen and Mayor
John Houston told Police Chief
Frank Hamm to work out all
details ahead of time so there
will be strict adherence by dog
owners to the regulation re
quiring them to keep their dogs
up in the garden "growing pe
riod.
Hamm said the police will
work closely with th humane
society in handling the situs.
tlon. Employment of special
neip may be necessary.
"Local dog owners should be
making plans now for keeping
up their dogs," said Chief Hamm
after the meeting.
'They should arrange pens or
other facilities to keepth dogs
on their own property. This is
th first year th ordinance has
been in effect and its require
ments should be fully realized
by the public."
Councilman Andrew H. Buss-
man asked what would happen
to state-licensed dogs, brought
into the city by outsiders, which
high break away and run
around.
"It's up to their owners to see
that they do not get away," said
City Attorney Dayton Van Vac-tor.
Keeping right after th Fi-
does, Councilman Rollln Can
trail complained that dogs are
damaging th cemetery proper
ty. He asked Chief Hamm to
do something about it
Will you authorize us to
shoot them?" asked Hamm
"If you sea a dog digging In
a grave, go ahead and shoot.
said Cantrall.
But a voice was raised at last
in behalf of the canines, when
City. Attorney Van Vector at
this juncture said he doubted
that these circumstances would
be legal justification for shoot
ing a dog.
The council authorized Fire
Chief Keith Ambrose to replace
10-year-old tires on the hook
and ladder truck, at a cost of
a little less than 1300.
Rejected was a request from
Everett Vanderpool that the
council pay a plumbing bill In.
curred when he called a plumb
er after water from a city man
hole backed up in his basement.
The councllmen said Vander
pool should have called the city
department about the matter in
stead of a plumber.
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
By Harold Gray
NECK BROKEN! HA I THfJ
ClOTHES LINE BUT HB MUST
HAVE BEEN RUNNING AT
TERRIFIC 6PBED1 WHY? OtO
2ANEY O0ULONT HH GOT
AWPY--HB WP6 TOO WEAK-
Y ; FUM91.EO TH3 0NP6OON
KNOW--A11TH6 HAD TO iJ I
DO WAS CRACK MIC SKULL L. A
AMD DUMP HIM THROUGH f. I
THE TRAP DOOR UNDER ' '
V THB TOOL HOUS6- .rl
mm' r i 11
if j -sr k&t JMkm
If fL?1
A TUotlEL! AND I MXJ WORRY OUST IN CAUG-
I DEAD OR ALIVE. OLD ABOUT A THING. immmmmrf TRY'thS)
Klamath'tt
From th filet 40 years
' ' 030 and 10 year ago,;:;';.
Tokyo Bombing
Stirs Tempo of
Bond Sales Here
Th spirit of free people
throughout the world was
lifted considerably when news
flashed word of the bomb
ing of Tokyo and three other
major Japanese cities.
Klamath citizens dug still
further into their pockets and
made for the first window
where they could buy war
bonds, stepping up the tempo
of an already brisk sale of
the bonds which has particu
larly been noted since the
fall of Bataan.
A check with banks and
other institutions where the
bonds are sold, proved a de
cided Increase in s a 1 e s' on
both Saturday and Monday.
Word of the Tokyo bombings
were received here Saturday
morning. ' Most of the sales
were in Type , or the "fam
ily bond," it was learned.
PLANE CRASH KILLS J
DENVER, April 20 (UP)
Lowry field army officials to
night Identified as Lt, Rosebush
and Lt. Rencher of Ellington
tiem, Houston, Tex., two men
believed to have been killed in
the crash of their twin-engined
trainer plane SO miles southeast
of Denver.
Since January, 1041, a total of
131,630 publicly financed homes
for defense workers were com
pleted or are under construction.
while' 224,358 FHA-inspected,
privately financed homes were
built.
From th Klamath Republican
AprU 24, 1902
Dispatch from Ashland quotes
Hervey Llndley, general man
ager of the Pokrgnma raltrond
company, then planning a rail
road running from the old Shas
ta Una to Upper Klamath lake,
as follows:
"Mr. Llndley has great appre
ciation of the possible natural
resources of the Klamath basin
country. There Is a country as
big as Ohio, naturally rich and
wonderfully productive with ir
rigation and Industrial develop
ment, and there Is not a pound
of railroad iron In lt. It certainly
has splendid prospects and In
vltes Intelligent investment of
capital."
From th Evening Herald
April 21, 1932
First lrrlgntlon waters .were
turned into the moln canal to
day.
A Jury in Justice W. B.
Barnes' court-disagreed today on
on the guilt or Innocence of Ar
thur Combs, charged with poi
soning a shepherd pup belonging
to Air. and Mrs. J. L. Clark.
Courthouse Records
MONDAY
Complaints Filed
Sehella Owens versus John
Owens. Suit for divorce. Charge,
cruel and inhuman treatment.
Couple married In St. Helena
Ore., March 9, 1020. Plaintiff
asks custody of minor child and
support' money. E. E. Drijcoll,
attorney for plaintiff.
Lola Jean Powers versus Carl
Powers. Suit for divorce.
Charge, desertion. Couple mar
rled in state of Washington.
February 2, 1938. Plaintiff asks
custody of minor child, and fur
ther orders and Judgment of the
court. Fred O. Small, attorney
tor piaintur.
Judgment
BUDuroan number company
versus Harold Korscn and De-
lores Korscn. Plaintiff awarded
$137.80. Maynord Wilson, at-
torney for .plaintiff, William Ga
nong, attorney for defendant.
Arraignment
Joe Vlncze. Obtaining money
by false pretenses. Pleaded not
guilty. Remanded to custody of
sheriff. George Chastain. at
torney for plaintiff.
Justlc Court
Clarence F a h y. Vagrancy.
Sentenced to 30 days In county
Jail.
Rupert Muple Height. No
operator's license. Fined 7.
John Stanton. Drunk on a
public highway. Flnl $10. sus
pended. John Aldcn Van Me tor. Dtv r.
1 "ting motor vehicle without
muffler In good condition, fined
$3.90.
Elmer Lee Morton. Permitting
four people to ride in front seat.
$3.30 bond forfeited.
William Alien Slmnann n-i,,.
ng while under the Influence of
Intoxicating liquor. Fined $100
and sentenced to 10 days in the
touniy jail.
Alex McPherson. Drunk nn
a puunc nignway. Fined $10.
Allco Barbara Wilkinson. Per
mitting minor to operate motor
vehicle. Fined $3.30.
Donald Southard Doe. Viola
tion of basic rule. Fined $25.
Lloyd Allen Warner. No mo
tor vehicle license. Fined $3.30
suspended.
Emory Mackle McDanlel. No
operator's license. Fined $3 SO.
-umcs joscpn Thomason. No
operators license. Fined $3.50.
James Joseph Thomason. Fall
ure to furnish proof of financial
responsibility. Fined $23.
Phares Lindeman Book. No
trailer license. Fined $3.30, sus
pended. Everett Ralph Haselwood.
Hunting without license. Fined
$12.20,
Albert Abraham Pnmn ir
Ing without license. Fined
$12.20.
Herman August Wmi 1...
ling without liceriBsv Tina.
12.20.
UNION SPONSORS
SPLUGUE JUBILEE-
SPRAGUE RIVER "Swing (J
your partner" will be the them
of the old time dance Jubilee to
bo sponsored by the local branch
of tho AFL union In the Spragu
Itlver uym on th evening of
Sottirrluy, April 23. Everything
possible will be done to stas
a setting similar to th old
fashioned dances held years ago.
The committee, which In
cludes Lee Garrett, Russell Ker
nen and Ray Miutoe announce
that the local merchants have
donated prizes for the beat
square dunce couple, best schot
tish, best clrclc-lwO'Steppers
and others. Several oldtlm fid
dlers are being lined up and an
effort will be mnde to comb th
vicinity for callers to keep th
dancers on tho move. Already
secured is a bevy of local talent
to help mak the danc a suc
cess.
The committee urges young A
n ...4 .ij ,n . , a-
w,,va vdl ,v IUIIICT UUI BinU BCW
the 11)00 "jitterbugs" in acUon.
Many young pcopls will ba
given the chance to learn th
dance steps that were popular
several decades ago.
ANSWERS
TO WAR QUIZ
1. He is a parachutist In th
U. S. marines.
2. Mcnzics was prim minis
ter of Australia.
3. Murmansk It an Arctla
port of Russia in Europe.
II n aaaSOBaaj a
iM-nitotio"
an
.-tuted
,'Uef
Co .,.
6' Bo
if s
UKLl. ..." M
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a, U Ml ja a
Man ' W I -fura" 1
PinCTDEE
ENDS TODAY
tun (! -t
MARY MARTIN Tftoiit
Brian DONr.FVV 55fCr
1 ta
TOMORROW
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
MATURE-
rfKifi&tf
COMING
ItTTY
GRABLf
jack OAKIE
'SONG of tie
ISMNDS
TOMORROW
On of the Swelleif. Entertainment! of the Day
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