December 8, 194 J PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR SELECTION SIDE GLANCES rwimillllll!!!!!!!!!! Si News PRANK JENKINS . HAICOI.H BPLKY Managing Eilltor A trraporani combination of the Oenlnt Hetald and the Klamath New. PuMlihed erj nnnnw eitrpl Sunday tt Eiplanade and Pine strwt, Klamith Fall. Oregon, bj the airraid Punllthing Co. nd the Klamath Kew PuMUnleti Company. Intered aa aeeond eli malttr at tht posMflce of Klamath Fall, Ore, on Auguit SO, , im) under act of congreM. March g, 1870. Mrmher of The Associated Pre nit Associated Praia la eMlullreljr entitled to the use of republication of all new dlsnatchM credited to It or not othenrlie credited In thla pper. and alio the local Mva oubll.hed therein. All right of republication of ipeclal dUpatchea are alio reserved. Represented Nationally by WeuHollidaj Co.. Inc. ... Das FYenetKio. Jfew York. Detroit, Seattle, Chicago. Portland, lot Angelee, St. tenia. Tnrouver B? C. Copiet of The Herald and Ni. together vlth eonpleta Information ghost the Klamath Fallt market, may be obtained for the aslt at any of these offices. On Month three Months Oh Tear Delivered by Carrier In City -t .n I ts tlBMHKR AUDIT BURKAD OP CIRCULATION Too Many Stop Signs IN these days when every motorist needs every drop of gasoline in his tank for moving, the presence of an excessive number of stop signs at local intersections be comes more of an annoyance and nuisance than ever. Furthermore, the safety value of these signs is sharply reduced by the slowing down and volume reduction of traffic. A few years ago, local traffic planners went on a stoppage binge. In some districts, particularly in the flats around the postoffice, they solved the problem of where to put stop signs by putting them at every intersection. When an accident occurred at a corner, someone would opine that if there had been a stop sign at that place, there would have been no accident, and likely as not a ptop sign would be erected. One night, we remember, a city councilman, on his way to the council meeting, almost collided with an pther car at a certain corner. As soon as he got to the council meeting, he wanted a sign authorized that would have stopped the other motorist involved in the near accident. If the other motorist had also been a council man, no doubt signs would have been ordered to stop traffic coming from both ways. The stop sign has its value, of course, but it can be overdone. In the days when fast driving was common practice, and blood flowed at many intersections, the stop sign was a needed deterrent. But now, with cars moving more slowly, and every ounce of precious gaso line needed for propelling rather than idling, it is time for a re-study of the stop signs on Klamath streets and time for elimination of some of them. Legal Test Impends . THE grand jury's action in indicting-County Clerk Mae rK. Short for' accepting certain amounts in payment for overtime work and for keeping records for the dog commission presumably will result in a legal test of a practice which, according to Mrs. Short, is fairly com mon in Oregon. This, it seems to us, Is a case involving chiefly. an issue of law rather than facts. There was no attempt to cover up the claims for payment of overtime work, and Mrs. Short discussed the claims in a statement to the press earlier in the week after the state auditors made their report. She said at the time that the question of overtime pay was recently discussed at a county clerks' 'meeting and a number of other clerks said they had made claims for such payments and felt they were within the law in doing so. In the audit for the first half of 1942, made by the secretary of state's office, attention is called to the over time payment of 545 to the clerk, along with a notation on the law which provides the clerk's salary shall be .52400 a year. The auditors' inference, at least, was that the law does not provide for payment other than the ?2400. The major question, then, is whether the law does permit such payments as were made to the clerk. This question, presumably, will first come up for a test if and .when the defendant moves against the indictments. At that time the court will probably determine if the facts as stated in the indictment constitute violation of the law. If the indictments withstand this attack, and the case goes to a jury, jurors must determine the facts. The prin cipal question of fact, it seems, will be whether the work for which payment was made constituted official acts for which the clerk is paid her regular $2400 annual salary. ; In case of a conviction and an appeal to the supreme court there would be a final determination of the legal questions involved. The case is in the courts and the proper public in terest is directed upon the legal aspects involved, rather than upon personalities or upon the reported strained relations between the offices of the county clerk and the circuit judge. Medical Services By GEO. A. MYERS Chief, Emergency Medical Services , . In modern warfare new tactics and new type weapons are being employed in ever increasing tempo. Offensive strategy and offensive weapons used effectively a year ago have in many cases been discarded because defensive means have been de vised which make them less effective now. A never ceasing race is in progress between the offensive and the defensive. In as much as offensive attacks are made in this war upon civilian populations it is essential that civilians keep abreast in defensive tactics. Emergency Medical Services, that branch of Civilian De fense which has assumed the responsibility of caring for casual ties must keep posted as to proper treatment of the injured. This will require constant study and practice. The antidotes and treat ment of poison gasses, the remedies and care of burns, of shock, of breaks and abraisions all these and more are charged to the responsibility of the Emergency Medical Services Unit. In the field this unit is composed of first aid teams and ambulance crews. If possible a doctor should be at the scene of an incident to direct operations. He should determine the priority and dis posal of. cases Involved. Those seriously injured he will send by ambulance to hospitals staffed by doctors and trained nurses. Gas contaminated clothing and gased areas are the prob lem of Decontamination Squads. These squads require special training and equipment to deal effectively with deadly gasses. A well organized and well trained Civilian Defense, na tional in scope, and with a single united purpose will be our best insurance second to our armed forces against enemy invasion. Not only will civilian morale be increased by confidence in abil ity to withstand attack, but our army and navy will be infinitely relieved in the knowledge that we are prepared and able to care for ourselves. Relieved of the responsibility of guarding a civil ian population they will be free to strike with greater force at the enemy. The armies of France and Norway were of no avail because of lack of civilian unity and preparedness. Britain was saved after her army was all but vanquished at Dunkirk, only because of her air force and her well trained civilian defense organiza tion. . With these recent examples before us, let us follow the ob vious course. B Dy- PaulMallon EHINMa WASHINGTON, Dec 3 Gov ernment, government, gov ernment! Manpower, manpower, manpower! . Remember when the manpow er shortage of the Montana cop per mines was in the news a few weeks back, day after day? Well, the government decided to take hold and cure it immediately, because copper is more valuable to the war effort than gold or silver. The war production board is- sued 8 b'8 ordcr jSlSWl'S nnrl it ni-int. sa service ooara iu IT r Paul Mallon withdraw cop per miners from the army and 3 put them back at work. Mr. McNutt's man power commis sion selected the miners, and the army hauled them back to Mon tana. When they arrived, there were found to be 50 large negroes who had never seen a copper mine before, at least not the type around Butte where they were to work. Shaft mining Is pursued there, the shafts running down to 3000 feet under the earth, where the heat makes the work more diffi cult than any other type of min ing. Some say the negroes were coal miners, but apparently most of them had worked in some type of surface or strip metal mining. The manpower commission had merely run through their draft cards which classified them only as "metal miners" and as sumed they could do the copper job. The commission might as well have sent beauticians. The local Butte Mine, Mill and Smelters union, whose men think something of their own lives, refused to work with the unskilled ex - troopers, where upon some of the liberals in New York began shouting in their press: "Racial discrimination.' The 50 negro soldiers sat down to see what next. Mean while, the copper mine manpow er problem remains. MEAT HEADACHE Government, eh? The agri culture commissioner of Virginia told a congressional commmittee that in this current meat short age, which is pinching the peo ple both in the pocketbook and appetite, the federal govern ment has limited abattoir pro duction. The Richmond abattoir, for in stance, is limited to 70 per cent. Deliveries to wholesalers are re stricted that much. But that abattoir, just as most others around the country, is owned by a few stock raisers, and they can slaughter their own first. When the small farm er comes in with his hogs or cat tle, they say: "Sorry, our quota is filled. Take your stock back home." The condition is national in scope. Yet the butcher cannot get meats. PACKERS CLOSED DOWW Manpower, eh? The same source told a congressional com mittee two of the three big pack ing companies furnishing Smith fields to the country have been forced to close down and throw their men out of work in the middle of the meat shortage. Their specially fed hogs are ready for smoking, and ham is scarce, but the government put a quota on Smithfield produc tion, which will not permit them to operate and make money. This grade is too high-priced for lend-lease sale to Britain so the government, for no parti cular reason, has Just let them go out of business, although Ameri can consumers, with more mon ey now, could pay for this high priced ham, and, if the govern ment let them do this, it would help cure the meat shortage and stop inflation. e e THINK IT OVER Defense Transporter Eastman has issued an order (says the agriculture director of Ohio) say ing children within two miles of school must alk, and so must those who live more than li miles off the bus lines. The or der, of course, will have differ ent results in Florida than in the zero winter weather of Ohio. More fian 300,000 farm school children are effected, although this will save only t!iree miles of rubber per bus per day. Like Mr. Henderson, who says the public may not get 65 de grees of temperature this winter ACHING STIFFSORE MUSCLES For Quick Belief- H ettar Trtaa OW-F. com. iai"av na sivtcr. iwcTt. m. wtq q & i-AT.'o,r. "Dear! Mrs. Smith is on the phone; she wants to bor row your blow torch, a hummer and chisel l" even if there Is pneumonia, Mr. Eastman says the kids should re turn to pioneer days,vhen every one walked to school. Managed economy, eh? Today there are many people, thinking themselves liberals, who still want the government to continue a managed economy after the war, or institute a state capital ism or socialism, which will al low the government to manage all business and lives as it is doing now. DIPLOMAT WANTED For the reasons cited above, and n any thousands more that have not been published yet, the temper of Washington is favor able to the appointment . of a man, even of the type -of Mr. Ickes, as a labor-manpower-draft czar. ' That particular situation is so susceptible to pain that what Mr. Roosevelt needs, of course, is an other diplomat like Jimmy Byrnes. Here is a job which surely requires a judicial nature to maintain balance between CIO and AFL, between army and civ ilian drafts, between labor and the war effort of the govern ment. - But the choice of a politician like Mr. Ickes, on its face, pre sumes i' at an administration fa vorable to union labor more than to the interests of the army, civilian or government, will be offered. Here is a china shop which would seem to require anything but a bull like Ickes. But Washington, as I say, has reached the point where "prac tically anyone will do." Telling The Editor Lattart printed hare mtait -not nt mora than (00 words In length, mult be writ, ten legibly on ONE SIDE of the paper only, and mutt be Binned. Contribution following theea rulae, are warmly wal- OPPOSES WITHOLDING TAX MALIN, Ore. (To the Editor) I have read your paper for many years and while I may not always have agreed with your views, I have always admired your sane feet-on-the-ground policy. In view of these facts I can not understand our indorsement of the policy advocated by Archie Rice. Namely to make the em ployer responsible for the pay ment of taxes for his employees. I believe that most of us have voted for measures which we failed to study from all angles, or, signed a petition because someone requested us to do so, or endorsed some measure with out proper consideration. I be lieve you are guilty of something like that in this instance. Our government, either rightly or wrongly, has prohibited chil dren, insane persons, morons and Indians from handling their own funds. Do you mean to go on record indorsing a measure placing a working man in this class simply because he works for wages? If so, why? Is he more dishonest than the mer chant, the Industrialist, or the farmer? Or would you say he is a moron? I am sure that you do not mean to imply any of these things . But after all, is that not what It amounts to? This measure is probably ad vocated as a simple means to collect taxes. Maybe. But Is it the best way? Or even a good way? If it is a good way, why "Compact" Size, Metal Picture Frames For Two Photograph! $1.25 to $1.75 VAN'S CAMERA SHOP 727 Main Phone 3618 not collect taxes from everyone in the samo manner. For in stance when you sell your papers to the dealer, have him hold out a percentage to pay YOUR taxes. When the farmer sells his spuds have the buyer hold out on him and so on. Just how we would collect from the buy ers I do not know, but if we had enough bureaus in Wash ington it could be worked out. Has any one sponsoring this measure figured just how many extra government employees it would take to keep the accounts, etc., of thirty million wags earn ers? Our government has at the present time about twice the number of employees as It had at the peak of our last war, with about the same number of sold iers drafted. Is it not time we called a halt to some of this, and find some other way to do things? The war will be over some time, but taxes will still have to be collected. A method 9et up at this time wil be hard to change. Especially if a bureau is created to administer it. We worried about the soft and inetf icient ' generation we were raising. Does any one doubt that our boys in the Army have not made good? We made men out of them by giving them responsibility. Let's let the working man worry about his own taxes. He is already a man and a damn good one. Here is another point: All of the labor in the United States is not employed by Henry Kaiser or Henry Ford, who maintain a large staff of bookkeepers. After things reach their normal chan nels again a large percentage of them will again be employed by John Farmer, James Carpenter, William Painter, Charles Plumb er, and a host of others who do not hire a large crew and do not maintain ' an office force. Instead they work shoulder to shoulder with their employees and spend their evenings keeping books and making out reports to the various government bureaus. Is it fair to add another burden to them? It is about time that we looked ahead to see where we are go ing. It may not be best to al ways choose the easiest road. It has been my privilege to live in a country where a boy could go to work as a newsboy and be come the managing editor of the newspaper. I hope we can keep this kind of a country. I hope that is what our boys are fight ing for. Not a country organized like an ant hill, with a special class for soldiers with their spe cial privileges and restrictions, another for laborers, another for employers, etc., with a paternal government presiding over all. Let us stop this class legislation NOW. Let us continue to pass legislation that applies equally to all persons. Yours truly, CLYDE VAN METER Malin, Oregon. i:!lliilll!,!i!,ll:llill!!ll,:!lllll eMerdm in ir. ; m 'I I I ill:' II I i'liT : 11 i i lmt' l ili From Th Klamath Republican Decembtr 2, 1902 Is Is suggested Unit an auto moblla line be started from Fort Klamath to Crater lake. With a railroad toon to reach Klamath Falls, and steamers on the upper lake, good connec tions could be made. F. S. Grochs has bean quite sick at his ranch in Langell valley but is now reported much better. He left here yesterday, via Ager, for Auburn, Calif. Eight people will arrive on Mr. Mnrplo's stage to innkc proof on timber claims. From Th Evening Horald Docmber 3, 1932 Willis Mahonny, contested mayor-cloct, said in Seattle to day that if the ouster move ment against him succeeds, he will urge an election to recall the present mayor and make him mayor, anyhow. A huge crowd was downtown last night for Christmas open ing. Total valuation of Klamath county property, for assessment purposes, is 336,839,023.08. WINTER FOLLY DENVER, UP) Walking past a shop, woi in saw three girls reaching for the celling. She summoned Patrolman Dominic Crow, who dashed in, gun in hand. The clerks explained that they hadn't been robbed they were just cold and testing wall ventilators. J Ms v Toko advantage of present itocki end prices . . ovory doilrable fur to chooio from... muikroti, qulrrol locko, Russian pony, Cara culs, Hudson seals, mlnk-blondod Northern Back muskrar, Russian Ermine, Eastorn mink, China mink and many, many othor.. Quality was nover better . . . prices never lower! FIVE EASY WAYS TO PAY . . . MAKE YOUR SELECTION NOW! FINE FURS by (laie Attn BitlzUi "Furs for a woman by a woman" NOW AT -tene 719 Main jacz. 1L' Protecting the Home front Horiie Keeper Plan Insurance Protection Tailored to the Growing Family (Example with $10,000 poller) 1. Pays $2,000 and up to cUao up family debts, 2. Pays $ 100 a month while children are dependent. 3. Pays $10,000 after children are grown. 4. "Fills Out" Social Security benefits. OREGON MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY LYNN ROYCROFT 118 North Seventh Street 1, . I 1 M Jk ill J? Chneie raw CMitmoe elite fram fc tvltfeet eeleetlen at ejvallhr merchen dlte tht w'v ever etfetedl Sav mar an all your Chriitmat neadi Nriy 400 playthlnie In TeylenJ . . , PrleW Uwl ' BEAUTIFUL BABY DOLL 16-Inches tall. Has darling dreei and -n .banner to motch. Moving Qv yes. CT847 OC Other Dolls from 35e to $5.95 "BIG BIG" PAINT BOOK. Contains 432 paoes of llluttratlons. Full color covor. Fun to color. Ke CT700 aVJ( TAKI IT OR IIAVI IT," NIW RA DIO SENSATION GAME. Fascinating, easy to play; sharpens your wits. For adults and children. $ I A3 CT752 I Other Games from 10c to $2.98 RIDE-A-CAR. All steel construction. Bright red enameled finish. M-a Aluminum colored wheels. For $?7 boys or girls. CT676. I SAND-GRAVEL DUMP TRUCK. Bright red body. Hos swivel screen to sift sand. 1Q, CT852 J7C TUMBLING MONKEY. Spring wind makes monkey turn over and a.e over on two choirs. jQ. CT85S , 37C Tort cWrflVea' nof o!7 ihewii. Xff Stores Mar Nof Hay All Toyi Wmlialtd at llm lhl odvtrtlitmtnt runt, but each fial 0 farg jaacfon of 00 Vouel. Cedar Chest with Stationery A lover Gift for "HEU" 1 large trinket box with wood! handles and brats hlngoi.Topv Is attractively embossed with scenic print. Complete. CT7M Utility Traveling iim ,..ewf -vwirjf m ell' !' ':rH IV IT . cul'i T1Veevi Leatherette, with' earrytnfl' handle and snap fastener. Has moisture-proof lining and adjustable strap to hold ar ticles In place. ' N43 1 Ask far lew riea en Other OlfM For Man In the Service. Practical Gifts to Please the Car Owner & Sportsman CHROMED FOGUOHTS. Sealed Beam Typo wllh amber & A lone. Wllh mounting bracket and iwlfch. E8010 Pair.... 4 eZU EXHAUST EXTENSION. Popular deitgn, flnlihod In "Air. croft Silver." Rod ewel trim. K3208 100-YD. CASTING REEL "Silver Sir Ike" level winding reel with Jeweled bearing. Z6263 MAN'S FIELDER'S OlOVE. Extra quality droned done hide, laced leather edge. CI 193 FlY ROD tINE. Premium select lilt-Impregnated and ell protenod 28-lb. toil. 23-yd. cell. 15776. (Not It- itf in luilrated) 3le4 Oar frocks Intludt Hundrtdt of Automotive Heme and Sparring Oeeds Which Are Idea for Olfr-Otvlng . . . Priced for Savngef All Merehandlie Subecr to Slock on Hand. . . We Reserve (ho Rlahr to Llmlr Quantlllee or Change peiilMiiona minvu, nonce mm m n I VtSO license,""-- m - I i0 sheets T..CIW3 I I ' io ! AQC I $3.98 "::rsSS 98' , 1 . ' . In neW " ...74 e' 0 AA . ain. i - s I acV.r'"r 1 intVu .0. .fS -o-i""8":" AQt Irede 1038 Main St. Phone 3514