Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 13, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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    AGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OKKUUN
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elrety nillllrd lo tilt n of re.
tiuMliullon ot ill oee dlrnetchM
rrMltrd to It or not otherwise
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the local newe puhllihd therein.
II rlghti of republication of
Ipccltl diipatrhei tre ftllO ro.
erred,
', FRANK JENKINS
Editor
X tftnportnr eomblnfttton of the Brenlnf Herald n4
the Klamith Newi. Published every afternoon xrM)t
Fundty it KipUnad and Tin ilmti, Klamath jYalU,
Orejon, by Ui Herald PublUhiui Co, and ttaa ElamaU.
Xtwi FublUhlag Company
Entered ai teoond matter at tha pottcfflc !
Klamath F1U, Ore., on August 10, P0t undr tct of
oonir, March 117ft.
.Vmtr of Audit
Bcuav Or Ciicclatiox
Reprintd Nationally by
AVIIT-HOLLIDAT Co., INC.
(Un FranrHro, New York, (t.
attla, Chicago. Portland, Lot
Angtlaa.
MALCOLM ETLEV
Managing Editor
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
DO THE war planners In Washington under
rate tha threat in the Pacific? Are their
eyes still trained too much on Europe, because
r that is the way Washington's
LI
eves have always looked?
These are questions vital to
all Americans, and particularly
to Americans living on the
V ' Pacific coast. For that reason,
ify '.iT- Hra'd Bnd News readers will
; j. una mucti tnai is interesting
(Vu y""S al important in the following
r 1 cd',orial which appeared in
i. I the Washington, D. C. Times-
LJl Herald, and was brought to us
EPLEY by Secretary Earl Reynolds of
the chamber of commerce on his return from
a visit to the national capital.
For a newspaper to propose that its city's
only industry be moved 1000 miles or more
away is unusual, to say the least, but there is
much more to the Times-Herald's editorial com
ment than that. The Times-Herald is not Just
close to the Washington scene it is on it -and
when it says that Washington is overly
fascinated by Europe, there must be reasons for
that observation.
We suggest a thorough reading of this inter
esting comment:
MOVE THE CAPITAL
(Washington, D. C, Times-Herald)
MAJ. GEN. ALEXANDER A. VANDEGRIFT,
who commanded the Marines on Guadal
canal from August 7 till the army took over
recently, is back in this country. In Washing
ton day before yesterday. General Vandegrift
fold reporters part of what he thinks about the
Guadalcanal fight and the troops engaged.
No soldiers in the world are braver than ours.
Our boys are .more inventive and resourceful
than the Japs, But, says Vandegrift, the Japs
are excellent fighters. In addition, they are so
fanatical that ''the Jap soldier won't surrender
until he is practically unconscious from wounds.
Most of those we captured were so badly wound
ed they were unable to kill themselves."
Outworn Capital
ALL of which moves us to suggest that the
Capital of the United States be transferred
from Washington to some point in the middle
west maybe on one of the many beautiful
.Minnesota or Wisconsin lakes.
When Washington was built on a swamp site
to be our capital city, it was logically located
in about the middle of the thirteen original
states of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia,
North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia.
The nation's geographical center now, how
ever, is Centropolis, Kas., and its population
center js just outside Carlisle, Ind.
Washington has one of the country's worst
climates in the summer; and in winter, too. It
is one of the country's worst laid-out cities
for modern automobile traffic, with its east-west
and north-south streets hashed up by avenues
radiating like spokes from the capitol and the
White House.
The city's original planners doted on Greek
architecture. Result: Large numbers of low,
sprawling buildings, in which you have to walk
miles to get where you want to go, instead of
letting elevators do that work for you in high,
compact, efficient buildings.
"We think we ought to start all over again
and build us a modern American capital city
somewhere in the middlewest. The Washington
buildings, including the new and monstrous
Pentagon, could be used for storing records
businessmen's answers to ceaseless question
naires, motorists' lists of how many tires they
had last year and what serial numbers those
tires bore, etc, etc.
'
Look West, Americans
BUT the fact that Washington is outmoded as
a capital city and geographically left be
hind is not the main reason why we should have
a new capital much nearer to the middle of the
United States.
The main reason is that as long as we keep
the capital on the Atlantic seaboard the capital
will keep worrying mainly about Europe's prob
lems and underrating the Japanese threat to
the United States from the Pacific.
For two foolish but powerful reasons, the
Japs are our logical enemies: (1) Their skins are
brownish-yellow, and (2) their eyes are squinchy.
We are not built that way; hence, we feel that
they are all wrong, and they feel that we are
all wrong, and each group feels a manifest
duty lo destroy the other.
Worse, the Japs as fighters are comparable
to the Iroquois Indians of Colonial times. Our
forefathers licked the Iroquois; but they could
not have done so if the Iroquois had had as
good weapons as our forefathers had.
The Japs' weapons are almost as good as
ours. We can lick them only with superior
weapons and superior forces. They are hungry
for more power and more territory; they hate
us, but they love the lush looks of California,
Oregon and Washington, and are determined to
take at least that much out of us sooner or
later.
Washington, being 3000 miles from the west -coast,
cannot grasp this ominous fact. It is
fascinated by Europe; and so it sends a badly
planned, undermanned expedition of dauntless
marines to push the Japs out of the Solomons,
and our boys arc stopped on Guadalcanal and
all but got their faces shot off.
After this war, Washington will again be
meat for pacifists with disarmament goods to
soli. If the country falls for that, the Japs
will wait until wo disarm sufficiently to suit
them, and-then they will descend on Hawaii
gain. If ihey can take Hawaii In a second
try, as they well may, they will swarm onto
our Pacific coast, while Washington wonders
what has hit us.
What we need is a genuinely American cap
ital of the United States, in place of the present
semi-European capital at Washington. If all
the congressmen and senators from west of the
Appalachians would band together to put over a
constitutional amendment to that end, we don't
see how they could lose.
w
Advertising Roundup
By DELBERT ADDISON
THE HERALD AND NEWS net paid circula
tlon went over the 10,000 mark late this
fall, much to the surprise of The Herald and
News.
It was a surprise because
the number of people giving
their carrier boys the monthly
six bits hit this nice round
figure at just about the time
that the ghost town talk hit
its peak.
A good deal of head scratch
ing and digging into the whys
and wherefors lead to a couple
of simple conclusions. One,
that people are reading papers ADDISON
more, for war news and for news of the home
front. And two, that established family units
haven't been broken up much by the move
to the services and the outside war industries.
Proud of Paid Circulation
WE HAVE always been inordinately proud
of each new step up in the net paid
circulation as an Index of greater return for
the advertiser's dollar.
This 10,000 figure slipped up on us without
much hip-hurrah, possibly because we were
engrossed in the vital problems of war . . .
and maybe because we were looking at the
action of advertising through new eyes.
It might be well to say that "net paid circu
lation" the term that we have loved to print
and roll off our tongues to obliterate the claims
of all other kinds of advertising that the net
paid circulation is simply the number of people
who buy the paper.
Don't think for a minute that there's any
thing wrong with it. A paper's subscription
books are carefully audited, by people repre
senting advertisers, and there's no watered stock
in the auditor's report.
. v
Salesmen Overdo It
yHE circulation figures do show the advertiser
I whether the paper reaches the people he
wants to reach, and they do show him the
possibilities for his ads.
The mistake newspaper advertising folks have
made, is in unconsciously inferring, if not in
deliberately stating, that the one inch ad for
Saturday's rummage sale will be read by each
of the 10,000, or however many it is, sub
scribers. We may go even farther, get out a pencil, and
figure that with an average of four and a half
persons per family the ad will reach 45,000
human beings, who will be delighted to attend
the rummage sale.
It just doesn't make sense. The good ladies
of the rummage sale are mildly disappointed
when 45 neighbors and cousins appear instead
of the horde of 45,000, and they decide that
advertising is a lot of hokum.
Money's Worth At 1
LOOK at it another way and it does make
sense. Suppose the paper's circulation is
10,000. Then, if the community has a popula
tion of somewhere around 45,000, it's a good
safe bet that most everybody reads the paper.
Suppose that only one out of every 100 adults
reads about the rummage sale. (And the Con
tinuing Study, mentioned here recently, proves
that 1 is average readership for one inch ads.)
Then, figure two adult readers for each paper,
also average. That makes 200 readers out of
the 10,000 subscribers.
When the Continuing Study reports started
coming in, 'we looked at these low figures and
quickly shoved the reports aside. It showed
one, two and three per cent readership of most
ads up to five inches long and two columns
wide.
Let's get back to the rummage sale. How in
the heck can a rummage-saler, for less than a
dollar, get his message over to 200 strangers
any cheaper.
The good ladies don't need to feel so miffed
about their 45 neighbors and cousins. They
got their money's worth.
Bread Subject Comes Up
ONE of the printers, when tagged at his
linotype for a free smoke, came through
with this one:
"What's the idea," he said, waving a sheet of
copy he was setting up for today's paper.
"What's the idea of printing this stuff when
we're getting good advertising from bakeries."
The offending story (appearing elsewhere In
the paper if it didn't get crowded out by some
late war news) turned out to be about home
made bread.
The idea is, of course, that the reporters give
the general news in the news columns and the
bakers give the bakery news in the ads.
It can be honestly reported here, though, that
bakery bread is one of the few food items which
has not advanced in price. What with no
slicing, no fancy wrapping, no trucks moving
out with less than full loads, no pickups, the
bakers have kept the price down.
And the bakeries what with telling their
story in advertising are still selling as much
bread as aver. 1
SIDE GLANCES
com tw w itwyyi, wc. t. u. nto. u. eat, ore.
"I told you when you were doing nil that buying that you
were getting too much of this darned corned beef hnshtH
Telling
The Editor
Letter, printed here muet not be ran
thut HQ woide in length, muet be writ
ton lej.ol, on ONI IIDf ot the piper
only, and muet be erred. Contribution,
following theso rule, ere warmly we-
ON WAGE QUESTION
OAKLAND, Calif., (To the
Editor) I note Fred H. Heit
bronner, letter to the editor in
your Issue February 9th. I note
he, along with the rest of the
would-be patriots are raving
over what the boys in the
trenches are . getting, this is en
tirely beside the point, there is
not a single member of the
Lumber and Sawmill Workers
union, AFL, that wouldn't go
barefooted if it would help the
boys in the uniform. But when
the government of the United
States can pay $65 for an auto
matic pistol that in peace time
sold for $35 and $40, and can
pay a steamship company $336,
000 for one trip to the Red Sea
for a ship that.they have listed
at a book value, of $8100, it
does not seem.1 Unreasonable to
ask that the men in the mill
and woods shall get as much as
a plain black negro is now get
ting in our defense projects.
I have just" helped finishing
a coast guard, training station
at Neptune Beach, Alameda,
Calif., in . which the negroes
were paid $1.05 for common
labor, however the common is
out of place for it Was rare
labor after 10 o'clock if you
went to the rest room, would
find most of the negroes there:
I don't believe it is unpa
triotic to ask that the white
men in our woods and mills
shall be paid as much as the
negroes are now getting, and
doing less work. Another thing,
Mr. Heilbronncr, the sawmills
and lumber companies are mak
ing more money today than thev
have ever made in the history
or the lumber industry, and
don't try to tell me different.
for I know what I am talking
about, I am putting the lumber
they are selling the government
of the United States from $40
up, into buildings, and most of
it is sorry stuff.
And to allay any doubts Mr.
Heilbronner as to whether I
have any rights to answer you
or not, I voted in Klamath Falls
in the last election, I am buying
property in Klamath county, on
which I am going to build me a
home, when all my sons receive
their final training, and I can't
be with them any more, and
my permanent address is the
Cascade Apartment Hotel, Klam
ath Falls, Ore.
W. YEOMAN,
90 Monta Vista St.
KENO ROADS O. K.
KENO, Ore.. (To the Editor)
I have lived and paid taxes in
Keno for 20 years, and I know
we are most all thankful to the
county commissioners for keep
ing our highway onen. Some
Job too. With man shortage
why plow out a few side roads?
We live off the highway and
manage to get to work every day
ana men get home again.
But those that live on the high
way are the ones to make the
first loud splatter.
Generally, people who don't
like Keno, move out.
MRS. FRED SCOTT
In Hospital Harold Putnam.
22. seaman first class, in rrlllrnl.
ly ill in McCaulcy hospital.
Marshfield. suffering from nnoti.
monia. Word was received by
we youth s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Putnam of 2505 Crot
street. Harold is a member of
the coast guard stationed at Port
uriord. He enlisted June 8.
1942 after HttnnHlnff Konn Mh
school. He later lnersori fnr A1rv.
ander brothers at Adln, Calif.
He was a well known basketball
player hero and won the sports
manship tronhv whllo nlnvins on
Ricky's team,
White House Confab
Follows FDR Promise
Of Blows At Enemy
(Continued From Page One)
powering blows; wo must do
likewise in tho west.
As for tho Pacific zone, tho
president spoke of the recently
concluded btfltle in the Solo
mons and declared:
"Wc do not expect to spend
the time it would tako to bring
Japan to final defeat morely by
inching our way forward from
island to island across the vast
expanse ot tho Pacific." He con
tinued: "Great and decisive actions
against the Japanese will be
taken to drive the Invader from
the soil of China. Important ac
tions will be taken in the skies
over China and over Japan
itself.
"The discussions at Casa
blanca have been continued in
Chungking with the Generalis
simo by General Arnold and
have resulted in definite plans
of offensive operations."
He said the enemy could be
qute sure that if Japan should,
be the first of the axis partners
to fall, the United Nations
would concentrate all on the
job of crushing Germany, and
that if Germany were conquered
first Britain, China and tho
United States would make an
"out-and-out final attack" on
Japan.
The president, turning again
to post-war problems, said one
main objective was to assure
jobs for the returning soldiers
and sailors. He was certain, he
said, that private enterprise
would be able to provide the
vast majority with Jobs and in
those cases where this could
not be accomplished congress
would pass legislation "which
will make good the assurance
of Jobs."
Pauline Riddle,
Beating Victim,
Still in Stupor
Pauline Riddle, Beatty Indian
woman who received a severe
beating at the hands of Etta May
Chocktoot in the city Jail Thurs
day night, was reported little
improved at Klamath Agency
hospital. Police here received
word that she was "still In a
stupor."
The Chocktoot woman, bare
footed, appeared before Police
Judge Harold Franey Saturday
morning and was fined $25 and
sentenced to 10 days in Jail.
Etta May Is said to have kicked
Pauline insensible.
Oregon Promised
Fair Treatment
In Butter Supply
WASHINGTON. Feb. 18 lP)
Oregon's butter shortage is not
a local situation, Prentiss M.
Brown, OPA director, told Sen
ator McNary (R-Ore.)
He said requirements of the
armed services and lend-lease
commitments made the shortage
national.
In response to McNary's in
quiry over complaints from his
state, Brown said Oregon would
be given "fair and equitable
treatment.
Married Mary Lee Brown
ond Earl Vernon Ritchie, both
of Chemult, were married by
the Rev. Victor Phillips in the
First Methodist church parson
age, 1105 High street, Thursday
evening, February 11. The
couple was attended by Mr. and
Mrs. Quinton Babcoock, also of
Chemult.
Goes Home J. H. Schnee-
bcrger, Klamath rancher living
on routo 2, was dismissed Friday
from Klamath Valley hospital
after receiving treatment for in
juries received when hit by a
bull.
REDS NARROW
ESCAPE LIE
TO 70 MILES
(Continued From Page One)
pinned against n narrow coastal
strip below Rostov.
Now Threit
In a series of victory bulletins,
the Russlim command tinuouncud
tho capture of cii;lit strategic
cities mid towns, including the
key rail center of Krasnodar in
tho Caucasus, and declared that
waves of desperate Gorman
counterattacks wero crushed.
Tho grave new throat to 250,
000 Germans uiulur virtual siege
at Rostov ami to another quarter
million nazls In tho Dmiots tmsm
developed when Col. Gen. Niko
lai F. Vatutlns central Don
armies planted the red flag at
Kradnoarmckk, only 70 miles
from tho north shore of tho Scu
of Azov.
African Lull
In recognition of his brilliant
exploits, Vatutln wus promoted
to a full general.
On the North African front
British headquarters reported
that Gen. Sir Bernard L. Mont
gomery's big guns pounded Field
Marshal Erwln Rommel's forces
In the southern Tunisia coitstal
region, below tho Miireth lino
while British 8th army patrols
fought axis armored cars farther
south.
Bad weather continued to
hamper operation., and there
was still no indication that Gon
Montgomery had launched his
big push against the Maroth for
tidcutions, 60 miles inside Tuni
sia.
On the western flank of the
300-mlle-long axis corridor, Gen.
Dwight D. Elsenhower's hond-
quarters reported that allied
troops beat off an axis ottnek in
tho hills east of Oii5.scltia, about
75 miles below Tunis.
Circuit Court
Clerk Bill Gets
Second Reading
(Continued From Page One)
bond In the sum of $1000. When
the clerk is appointed and qual
ified the county clerk shall turn
over to him all records, files,
moneys and all things pertaining
to the duties of clerk of tho cir
cuit court. ,
All laws now applying to the
office of county clerk, so far as
the same aro applicable to the
office of circuit court clerk, shall
apply to tho new office.
The measure carries an emer
gency clause, and in case of pas
sage would go immediately Into
effect.
Tho bill Is strongly favored by
Circuit Judge David R. Vnndcn
berg, and Is opposed by County
Clerk Mae K. Short. Such a
measure was suggested by tho
county grand jury.
It's Peaceful
Again Today On
Guadalcanal
(Continued From Pago One)
Men are resting on cots. Others
arc opening packs and gotting
out their possessions Many aro
shaving and washing again.
Field kitchens havo been set up
and cooks expertly flipped flap
jacks into waiting plates this
morning.
Jap bodies are being quickly
buried in the Jungle and work
squads are cleaning up rubbish
of the battle.
Veteran Seaman
Vouches for US
Men, Weapons
(Continued From Page One)
tack. But we were not unpre
pared. It wasn't long before we
had that situation in hand."
Bockius said thut there is no
question of the outcome of tho
war with Japan, but that every
man on the ships knows It Is go
ing to be a tough struggle, su
perior mentality, superior equip
ment, and superior productive
capacity will tell for America,
he said.
Tho visiting machinist s mate
said he has been having a great
time in Klamath Falls, ond ho
asked to bo quoted emphatically
in appreciation of the fine hos
pitality shown service men In
this community. Ho is taking his
leave hero while awaiting a new
assignment to service at sea,
When ho goes back, he will
tako with him an ugly, rugged
trench knifo which was given to
him Saturday by Sheriff Low.
The sheriff brought it back from
France after tho last war.
Bockins Intends to get the
weapon into the hands of a fight
ing man who will be likely to
need it in a hand-to-hand tangle
with the Japs,
"Everything they say about
our fighters needing knives is
true," said Bockius. "In tho sort
of fighting that is dono In this
war, there aro times when
knives are mora important than
guns" t
From tho Klamath Republican
e Ftbruary 12, 1903
.11. 11. Van Vtilkenburg hu
bought tho O. T. Brown place,
four miles wost of town.
C. E. Iloyt, popular hotel keep
er of Furt Klamath, Is making
arruuKoincnts to run a lino o(
sliiges botwocu thut place and
Crater lako next summer.
Molhitso brothers entertained
u lingo crowd at their now resi
dence in Fort Klamath last week.
00
From the Klamath Newt
Fobruary 14, 1931
Local arguments ruge as to
whether married women should
bo permitted to teach In the
schools,
o
Past Exulted Rulor J. C. Boyla
will preside at a banquet Thurs
day night when Elks celebrate
tho 05th anniversary of the
order.
Wife, Son of
Bund Leader Taken
In Alien Roundup
NEW YORK, Feb. 13 (!)
Elsu Kuhn, wife of Fritz Kuhn,
former national loader of the
Gormun-Aincrlcun bund, unci her
son, Wultor, 16, have been tukon
into cuntody In a roundup of
enemy aliens, It was learned today.
Denaturalization proceedings
ugnlnst Fritz Kuhn aro pending
in federal court.
Kuhn is a prisoner at Dunne
mora, N. Y whoro he is serv
ing a five-year term for steal
ing bund funds.
Hitler No Longer
Actively Directing
Army, Says London
LONDON, Feb. 13 (IF) A usu
ally reliable foreign sourco sold
here today that for tho past fort
night all Important Gorman
army orders havo been signed by
the high command instead of by
Adolf Hitler, Indicating that tha
nazi fuehrer no longer Is active
ly directing the army.
The namo of tho Informant
could not bo revealed.
Hitler still retains .the title of
commondor-ln-chlcf, ithe Infor
mant added, and the, dally Gor
man communiques are datellned
'Tho Fuehrers Headquarters"
as formerly, but, he sold, "It
looks like the generals aro mak
ing tho decisions now, not Hit
ler."
Treatment Dean Hagen, 14,
son of Clarence H. Hagen of
3245 Boardman street, was dis
missed Saturday from Klamath
Valley hospital after receiving
medical treatment.
NIP AIR RASE
AI HU GETS
PI
D
Hi
Dismissed Mrs. Arthur
Learning and infant daughter
left Klamath Volley hospital
Friday for their home at 4353
Shasta Way.
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
LOANS
Long term loans at low Inter
est rates on retail business properly.
Bogue Dale
. 120 S. 0th Street 2-15
CASH FOR 1938, 1930, 1940 and
1941 cars. Phono 7013. 2-13
ENGLISH POINTED PUPS
Moles, 4 months. Also tire
chains, 34x7 single truck, 4,75
by 10, 4.50x21, passenger, now.
Keno Cafe and Grocery. 2-19
4 ROOMS, bath, north part of
town. $580, half cash. Phone
3078. . 2-13
FOR SALE G. M. Frlgldalrc,
"Coldwall" model. Cost $237.
Like new. $150. 9 by 15 light
green chenille broadloom rug
and pad, $45. 1705 El Dorado.
Phone 8441. 2-13
EXPERIENCED cattle man
wants foreman Job on ranch.
Good references, Wrlto or call
R. J. Larson, 1317 Wall St.,
City. 2-15
2 BEDROOM houso partially
furnished. References. Call
at 1202 Division or phone
5608. 2-10
FOR SALE One registered
Holstein. One pure bred Here
ford bull. Both coming two
years old. Phono 8361 or B47fl
evenings. 2-13
WANTED Used baby buggy,
prerer folding typo. Phono
6298. 2-16
FOR SALE Lease and equip
ment of restaurant and room
ing house. Phono 8205. 2-16
OIL TO BURN For Union
heating oils phono 8404,
Klamath Oil Co,, 618 Klamath
Ave. 2-28m
(Continued From Page One)
miles below tho big enemy bare
at SuIiiiuhuii, wero continuing to
retreat northward after lotting
nearly 1000 killed.
In Utiriuii, RAF day and night
l'ulders delivered wldespieod an
sutills on Japanese rullwuy
trucks, river itnanicrs, factory
buildings unci other targets,
whllo Japuneso planes countered
with Ineffective attacks tin Brit
ish troops near lttithndiiiing, 25
miles north of the enemy bare at
Akyub.
TAKEOFF CRASH
KILISLTJI!
(Continued From Puge Our)
one of tho machines had been
located.
Tho planes have been iiilwlug
since Fob. 5, One curried 10 per
sous and tho other three, All
were believed lo , bo United
States citizens.
Royal Canadian air force
pianos aro UMilitlliig US planes In
tho aerial search which Is still
going on.
FOR A BETTER WEARINO
Shirt with a better fit, try
Van Houscnl In whites and
colors. Rudy's Men's Shop.
2-20
Patrolman Asks
Civil Service
For Hearing
(Continued From Pago One)
because, Davis Is not sum what
nnys he will bo in town, ho
could not say definitely when
the hearing will bu held, lie
said lie would like to hold It
on Tuesday evening, and will
know on Monday about the
time ot the hearing.
Davis slated thut ho hud not
received a written notlco of the
suspension. Police Judge Harold
Franey, secretary of the com
mission, said that no order sus
pending Mllhorn had been filed
with him on Saturday. (Civil
service commlnslon regulations
require that when an omployu
Is suspended, notlco of suspen
sion shall be filed with tho
board within 24 hours there
after). Pollco Chief Earl lleuvol nld
that ho had notified Mllhorn of
tho suspension, but that it was
trua he had not yet filed notice
with the board. Ha said ho
would taka euro of that detail
immediately if such a require
ment hud been overlooked.
It was learned that Chief Hoo
ve! ond Officer Mllhorn had not
been In agreement concerning a
churgo filed In connection with
tho truffle arrest of E, D, John
ton on February 5. Pollco rec
ords show thut Johnson was
charged with reckless driving
and $25 ball forfeited.
Chief Hcuvcl said Mllhorn's
suspension had nothing to do
with tho Johnson arrest, but re
lated to other mutters In connec
tion with Officer Mllhorn's
work In tho department.
VITAL STATISTICS
GOULD Born at Hillside
hospital, Klamath Falls, Ore.,
February 13, 1043, to Mr. and
Mrs. James Gould , Quartz
Mountain, Ore., a boy. Wolght:
7 pounds 14 ounces.
k 1943 m
For many of us, Valontinc's
Day, 1843, will not be the
happy clay of tradition. There
aro a few things, like war,
that affect our lives beyond
our control.
There aro other things that
bring sadness into our lives,
wnicn should bo avoided. Fi
nancial indenenrlenen Inr
your old ago Is nno thing
that will make each Valen
tine's Day n happy ono.
It can easily bn arranged
through
oAh J, JfauitoH
llW'nKHKNTINO TIIR
EQUITABLE LIFE
ASSURANCE SOCIETY
N. Jlh pi,,, mi