TAGS FOTJS HERALD AND. NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON July IS. 19 MALCOLM BPLET A UtniwrtrT eombttifttloD of th Evrnlni ftwrtooB rttwpt Siindaj t KiplBna.de and ueraia ru miming Ma vn Aiimn Inured M Mcoad) Ihi mtlr tt the The AitodaUd Frei la dlipatchtt audited to It or not othrwtM ews puoiuned uierein. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU 0 CIRCULATION Benrcitntvd Nationally by Wt-UollldtT Co.. Inc. flaa FranoUtt, Xrw Tort, Detroit, SettUe. Vancouver, n. o. copies ot The utraia and new, toftuier wun eompieta rarorraattoa About toa Klamath Fall market, nay be obtained for the aaklnf at any of taea offices Delivered by Carrier m City One Month - - - f .W Three Month 1.24 Ona Tear - ,, MAIL RATES PAY A Hi. 9 IN ADVANCE By Mall la Klamath, Lake, Modoe and BUktyov Coontla Thre Montfw . Kit Months . Ona Year . Army and Slot Machines SHUT-DOWN of slot machine operations in public places throughout Oregon has been asked by Governor Char les A. Sprague, following receipt of a request from Gen eral John L. DeWitt of the western defense command : asking elimination of machines operating near army en ' campments. v v This request follows an army order some time ago to the effect that houses of prostitution in designated areas be closed out. . Responsibility for carrying out these orders rests with the state and local authorities. The head of the army in this territory has issued the orders aad requests. Wartime practices require strict observance. Back of these orders is an attempt by the army and the government to safeguard the ' morals and financial well-being of men in the services. Compliance by the authorities here should meet with general public approval. Hamm Appointed FRANK HAMM'S appointment to the office, of United States marshal will be generally acclaimed here, where Mr. Hamm has served many years as police chief under three city administrations. Chief Hamm has filled a dif ficult position with tact and good judgment His service through a number of changes in city administration was a tribute to his success m the office. Chief Hamm's appointment is a political landmark be i cause he hails from the second congressional district and Klamath county. Not many out down here. Federal appointments have been going pretty regularly to downstate communities, principally Multnomah county. -.v ?::.; -j '. The leave-taking of Hamm puts an appointment prob lem before Mayor John Houston. The mayor probably does not need to be told that it takes an able man to han dle successfully the police chiefs job. in Klamath Tails. Wings for War Freight (Christian Science Monitor) IT has become a commonplace to say that the United Nations, over the hump in the battle of production, now have to win the battle of transport.' Great concern is naturally expressed over the Inroads U-boats are mak- . lng on sea-borne transport. But is anything Jike adequate public or official attention given , to the. possibilities of t winning the battle of transport by taking to the air? The tests of Glenn Martin's 70-ton flying boat, the Mars, give point to this question. This ship, or the now almost legendary B-19 ex- ' perimental bomber built by Douglas for the army, could " transport more men to Europe in a month than the Queen Mary, taking all but the heaviest equipment. Major de Seversky in his eye-opening book, "Victory Through Air Power," declares 100 planes could feed England. Actually : 1,000,000 pounds of freight are being carried by plane daily right now to various American AEF's and this amount will be rapidly expanded with new box-cars of the sky, now coming off the production lines. . The airway from India has become China's main sup- " ply line. On paper it has been estimated that fifty cargo planes could carry more than 1500 trucks operating on " the Burma Road, but such earth-bound things as moun tains and lack of gasoline in China makes this doubtful with the older planes now being used there. Better planes, lighter materials, more efficient en gines and fuels are coming fast, however, and it is not too much to say that both .military and civil, transport will quickly be revolutionized. The great need is for more imaginative thinking by public and officials both to use planes now available and to build air fleets of bigger, better planes which might win the war before the two ocean navy can be finished. Courthouse Records Marriage - Applications . SHAW-GALLAGHER. Robert Douglas Shaw, 24, air corps pi lot. Resident of Walla Walla, Wash., native of Washington. Patricia Jane Gallagher, 21, stu dent. Resident of . Klamath Falls, native of Oregon. Three day requirement waived. SPARKS-WHARTON. Mervel Aaron Sparks, 22, soldier. Res ident of Tulelake, Calif., native of Texas. Dorothy Merle Whar ton, 18, waitress. Resident of Tulelake, Calif, native of Tex as. Three-day requirement waived. BEAL-VARNUM. Leslie Floyd Beal, 32, lumber worker. Resi dent of Klamath Falls, native of California. Jennie May Var num, 30, housewife. Resident of Klamath Falls, native of MInne s o t a. Three-day requirement waived. Complaint Filtd Leona Bell Kelley versus Ar thur Jack Kelley. Suit for dt vorce. Charge, cruel and Inhu- man treatment. Couple mar ried in Klamath Falls, Septem ber 21, 1941. Plaintiff asks property settlement. E. E. Drls coll, attorney for plaintiff. Justice Court Donald Dale Etherton. No operator's license. $10 bond for feited. Veloy Ervln Hunting. No op erator's license. Fined $5.50. James William Fischer. No PUC permit. Fined $25, William Vernon WhltlBtch. Htrild tod the Kltmith Nwi. Published ti Pine itrtt, Kl&cikth Ffclli, Orefon, by tht nei -udiiiiid winpaa. potoff 1 of Kltmtlh Falls, 0r., e Aufutt SO. Mtmber of The AMoeltUd Prw xeluitvclr entitled to ih use of rtoabllMtloa of til oredlUd In UiU paper, All right of republication of pedal dupatoboa are also rerred. CTileafo, PorUuid, Lot Anttltt, Bt- loch. . , T.40 political plums are handed No muffler. Fine $5.50, sus pended. Gilbert DeForrest Lilly. No operator's license $5.50 . bond forfeited. . . .. . .. Theodore Clark Courson. Passing with insufficient clear ance. Fined $10. Vernon Audie Keffer. No op erator's license. Fined $5.50. William Lilley. Disorderly conduct. : Pleaded not ' guilty. Trial set for Tuesday, July 14, 1842, 10 a. m. Bond set at $250 cash or $500 property. Commit ted to county Jail. . WHAT, NO CRACKER BARREL? -WILSON, N. C, (JP) When the tailor in whose shop they used to hang about went out of business, the hangers-on formed a "Squatters club" and renter! the building for the express pur pose of sitting around and "shooting the bull." ' A big sign out front proclaims it "The Original Squatters Club, Chapter No. 1." ' s ROUGHER THAN THE PAW METHOD EUGENE, Ore., (IP) A young housewife, doing the family washing, noticed a small mound In the clothes kept buckling the blades of the electric washer. After repeated efforts with a stick failed to level the mound she decided the machine was too full, and started to remove some of the clothes. . A bruised and water-soaked kitten emersed from one nf the garment News Behi ByPAULMALLON wrASHrNGTQN. July 13 Some significant post-war planning to raise world wage rates already is being urged in side the government by Vice President Wallace's board of eco nomic warfare, but not without encountering difficulty. The Wallace group wants the state department to run into some of our war trade contracts with Latin American nations a provision which will start raising some wage levels in those na tions. It would be a compara tively simple matter for this gov ernment to require that certain labor standards be met in any goods it purchases from foreign countries. Some officials, however, doubt that this is the time to start world social reforming. They want to win the war first and then they think that they could look at what is left with a more objective and experienced view point But the Wallace boys believe it is never too early to start re forming and are pressing their views onward. A decision is likely within a week or two. HAITIAN EXPERIMENT The only very clearly social experimenting for the post-war world was done in the Haitian Development company financing by the Export-Import bank, and this was done long before the war started. The company was created under government aus pices for the growing of sisal and rubber, and has been trying to boost basic Haitian wage aver ages of 20 cents a day by offer ing 25 to 50 per cent more. Another modest experimental beginning of Mr. Wallace's plan for the post-war world is the Peruvian cotton deal. The way the deal is being worked out of fers the first concrete evidence of how this government will go about curtailing world farm pro duction, how much it is likely to cost, and the difficulties to be encountered. Agriculture Secretary Wick ard signed in April an agreement with the Peruvian government whereby two-thirds of its cotton crop (200,000 bales) will be bought by this government and put in storage. This government is to continue to take the same amount each year hereafter, at the annual cost of about $10,- 000,000, the crop to be stored in Peru. It was done as a good neighbor gesture, but the government has used the action to try out an in ternational crop curtailment idea. We promised to pay the Per uvians a one-and-a-half per cent increase in price for every one per cent their acreage was cur tailed. The scheme also worked the other way, proposing to cut the price an equal amount for every similar increase in acre age. No one outside the agriculture department paid much attention to the matter until recently. when the American cotton mar ket began worrying- about that surplus. Senator Bankhead and others of the cotton bloc then extracted a promise from Mr. Wallace that 'Aw, Come On, Let's Go For a Ride' (NEA Telcphoto) Duty before pleasure- and this U. S. soldier on santry duty "somtwher in Australia" resists th pits of a young AunU ad mlrsr to leave his post and oo for a rid of her scooter, ...ft . SIDE GLANCES KML tWIYIIM mlSf. MC T. M. lift U-1. Wt. Off. -?1 -lt f-f "It took gas rationing and the tire shortage to bring It back, but the town inust have looked about like this when, our parents were young and wouldn't they love it?" the crop would not be brought into the United States unless our own production was unable to satisfy war requirements. The post-war difficulty of foreign agriculture production coming into competition with our own was thus encountered at the out set. As long as cotton senators exist, that cotton apparently will have to be sold by this govern ment to some foreign consumers in some way whereby it will not compete with American cotton. That will be difficult, if not im possible. The agriculturists here, how ever, have not let that prospect dismay them. The Peruvian farm production system is a Spanish hacienda approximation of bur own share cropper condition. The boys here are already feasting their eyes hungrily on that subject, al though it is not mentioned in the agreement. " ROSS ADVANTAGE The Hitler break-through of the Russian lines caused no great alarm here, even after he was able to develop it. .With such fire power as the Germans possess the ability to mass insuperable offensive weapons at a striking point beyond precedent in all history Hitler could be expect ed to break through at any time on such a long front. But as such breaks develop, the issue levels itself down to two main considerations, wea pons and fighting spirit, both about equally important. The Russians are short on weapons but even longer than the Ger mans on fighting spirit. Consequently, the eyes of Washington have been focused with some apprehension but no despair on the dispatches from the front. SUB SINKINGS Isolated sinkings of single ships, recently reported along our Atlantic seaboard, does not mean that nazi subs are merely picking up strays and avoiding convoys. Frequently they can V tl Bet into a convoy for om Wow, dui tnen have to withdraw im mediately to escape detection, Consequently lone sinkings from convoys are common. Klamath Yesterdays from i ,'jhri.' l$4aj'fii From the Klamath Republican July 17. 1902 The county courthouse is to be treated to about $200 worth of improvements. . - Liveryman Hazen arrived Sat urday from Ashland with a dozen applicants for timber. They left the next morning for me eastern part of the county to mane meir selections. The Bonanza bridge and the Wilson bridge, both crossing Lost river, have been condemned by the county court. Repairs will De maae soon. r From the Evening Herald July 12, 1932 Oscar A. Smith. 44. nromlnent rwamatn jralls business man, died suddenly Sunday while hik ing on a trail to a mine in the Umpqua country. Grant Hess announced todav he will be a candidate for may- or this fall. Mrs. A. H. Newton of Merrill received a fractured leg Sunday when she fell at her home. Mr. and Mrt. James Fowler and R. L. Browning visited Reeky Point Sunday. Let the Experts Tell You If It's Explosive or Not Objects dropped from planes might be of an explosive nature and persons finding them would do well to notify civilian de fense headquarters rather than run the risk of a personal In vestigation, according to Earl Reynolds, defense coordinator. The defense setup provides for a bomb reconnaisanee group wnicn is trained to recognize and handle all types of bombs and explosives. They may bt reach ed by calling 5183 or the police department. Radio Day by Day NEW YORK, July 13 (Wide World) Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, speaking at a win-the-war rally at Raleigh, N. C, is scheduled for an MBS broad cast at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday. At 8 p. m. today Joseph E. Davles will speak tonight from Omaha over MBS. Read The Classified Page FIRST FEATURE James Stewort Lionel Barrymon .In "Navy Blue and Gold" SECOND FEATURE mm Telling The Editor Ktlm prinlMl Im mutt not M mor than IN oordi In Itnilh, mutt bt wtll tm m ONI (ID! ol Iht fupu win, and mull bt tll-iad. Oonlilbulloiaj followlnj ItMtt nil, art warmly wok KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To the Editor) Those who have voiced objections to the large bond quota for our country, might well ponder the following and swallow their words. Klamath Is an exceptionally rich county: so rich, in fnct, that every blada of grass Iihs a gierii back, every bird a bill, every chimney a draft. The women wash with Gold Dust, every horse has a check, every ditch and creek has two hunk. Evun our streets are flushed and the lawns get a rake-off. Every cloud has a silver lining and every flower, a scent, whan wa nut a $5 bill in our pocket, we double it ana wncn we take It out we find It In creases. These am liiftt ii four nf tit rn. sons whv Klamath Fnlln 1st a uimrt place to live In! WHS. Z. W. DIXON. E TAKES FIRST JOB Members of the Klamath unit of the Oregon Women's Ambu lance corps who are stalling the Salvation Army-sponsored am bulance, had their first call for service Sunday night They drove to the Klamath county Infirmary, whero they picked up Gilbert A. Lion, 50, and brought htm in to the train which was to take him to the Veteran's hospital in Portland, with Ethol Brown as his at tendant. ... Lien was the victim of a shooting accident about a year ago In which a part of the bone In his upper leg was shot away. Until recently he had been In Klamath Valley hospital with his leg In a cast. Those manning the ambulance said it was a tough assignment for a " first, slnco the man was 8 feet 2 Inches tall, weighed 310 pounds including the cast, and the stretcher hud to be got ten onto the train through a window. OWAC members par ticipating in the assignment were Kathleen Livingston Grace Rhoads, Ella Mullin and Gladys Lofdahl. , Lien was moved to the Vet erans' hospital through efforts of the VFW auxiliary, v Collisions Fatal To Six in State - Over Weekend By The Anoclated Press Highway collisions killed six persona In Oregon last weekend. Three died near Pendleton in the collision of an automobile and a train Saturday. . They were Mr. and Mrs. Vera Barn hart, Washougal,. Wash.,, and their three-year-old son. A head-on collision near Port land killed two others, John M. Alton, 25, and Bernard Collier, 23, both Portland. Four others the car which Alton was- driving also were Injured, none seriously. The lone occupant of the other machine was un hurt. Ernest Moot Sr., 87, suc cumbed at Silverton yesterday to Injuries suffered In an au tomobile accident Saturday night. You're Right It Was Colder If you thought you were cold Saturday, it wasn't your Imagin ation. It's right there in the books, minimum 40 degrees, coldest July day since 1935. And Sunday wasn't much bet ter. The thermometer dropped to 43 degrees, but at least It had a clouded sky as an - excuse, whereas Saturday was perfectly clear, giving the sun every op portunity to do iU stuff. Its lack of cooperation made even the weather man feel apologetic. PHIETtMI NOW I WHAT'S -C00KIN?' 0 tovi, i hi he's bumei to i etltpl -i "tuc AM HARDY' ttwis Miticr STONE ROONEY eremi my PARKER HOLDEN Attn RuUiirford SariHidin nd Donna Reed . A L S 0 MARCH OF TIME Mighty Navy Latest News Actor Wins 'Five 4mm UrHWi-bom Aclor Cnry Urant nmt lit ccnt storo hclrrsa, are pictured at Mke Arrowhrn1, Cftllf., whrrn they eloped to climax a tliree-yenr romance. Only lour frlrntta wllnmed the iMtrriniro oi-remonv. Miner, Suspected Slayer Of Tiree, Dies FAIRBANKS, Aluskn, July 13 (!) Answering demands for his surrender with gunfire, Pete Yabucuvln. 00. a miner, sus pected of the slaying of throe persons, ni surioaited by smnko from a fire lighted to drive him from a nil no tunnel 12 miles from hero early yes terday, 'Truced to the mine entrance by a federal bureau of Investi gation agent and a deputy Unit- eel btatrs marshnl, Yabacavln, believed to bo tho man who killed Mllo Snullch, 85, his 55 "Helpless" Little . Fawns Should Be Left in Woods There Li nothing more help less looking than a llltlo spotted fawn apparently deserted In the woods, but thoso finding them should resist the temptation to bring them In, according to E W. Tlchcnor, stato police ser gonnt. Ho pointed out that the chances are the mother Is nearby but cautiously keeping out of sight. Onco a fawn has been handled, ' however, the mother will rcfuso to take It back and then tho little deer Is really In for serious trouble When they ore brought In and turned over to authorities It creates a problem as persons aro not allowed to keep them as pets without a permit from the game commissioner, Tlchcnor said. Porsonal Interest In Case OAKLANfl rnllf rin n. , I 1' I I 4 V Hceman Melbourno Endcrs has arrested a lot of burglars In his time, but never before has he searched for one with such ven geance. He is looking for tho burglar who entered the Endors home, and stolo his handcuffs, ammu nition for his service pistol, a police call box key and his shin iest whistle. THANK YOU, MR. and MRS. KLAMATH FALLS! For Your Enthusiastic Reception . Yesterday of This Great Picture! lmdjMMHl OF ALL TIWEi yj ADDITIONAL ATTRACTIONS: "Information, Please" More Worlds to Concpier "Baby Wants a Bottle Ship" Latest Newt ' - and - Ten' Heiress jiA-, ratA'i MWJ". .rjSV'f'" bride. Uurlinra lliitlnn, flvc-nnd-u-n- in Tunnel your-nkl wife and Mury Stuy,. 14, Thursday nUM,. fired eight shots out of the entrance. The officers built a fire att Iho tunnel mouth and fired pi-' tol and rifle shot Into tho 70 foot shaft, only to bo met wltli two return shots. Savcral hours Inter the FBI agent entered tha tunnel and. found Yabacavln, dead of uf-, locution, au-lcct from Iho tun-, nal mouth, Ills revolver con tained four loaded and two emp ty shells. . ,. , . , M The officers suld tluty were convinced tho elderly miner killed Suullch and his wlfo be-, cause they objected to his at tentions to 'the. girl and then slew the girl because the spurn- 'JJ ed him. Tho young girl' was : , housemaid for tho Snullch-fm--fly. ' - They said they believed Yaba-1 cavln struck Pcto Mcsich on' tho head three times with a club arid ' fractured His skull Friday 1 morning In McslchV room In the International hotel' because Mcsich put him out of the hotel several months ago.' The bodles'ol tho three slain' persons were found by a heigh-' bor early , Friday. " 1 ' ' E. A. Lowe,. 34, ' Dies Suddenly ' ' In Lebanon, Ore. E. A. Lowe, 34, of Lebanon,, Ore., passed away suddenly last, Friday night of a heart attack, . according to word rccclyed hcro. Lowo is well known in Klamath . Falls, and Is a cousin of Earl Whitlock ond a, brothor-ln.law of Carl Mlchclson. Lowe's father, who operated a , funeral homo In Lebanon, died. of heart attack two years ago and Lowe had been carrying on , the business slnco that time.- Mr. and Mrs. Whitlock left.: Sunday morning for Lebanon where they will remain for sev eral dnys. Arrangements for the funeral havo not been made known. . . ' i ' 8