PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON May 0, 1948 iltbrr of Ts Aaoauro Put Tt) Auoelifw Preee li eielo llr anUtl.il to the OM H MihllMaa or til fjewe dlipttehN mtui to H Mt ottiwiM radltee to U Pp. "I" the toil Dtwi publUhed therein, ill rlftu ot rspubllotloo of kMdij dl.petehee ere 1m re, ttmd. fRANK JENKINS JTdiror A leninorarr eomMaatlon of tie Evening Herald end the Klamath K.w. Publlihed every Itenww egeepS Bund.! at geplanaile and Hut alroU, Klamath Falls, Onion, bi the Herald fuiillibloc Co. and tha Klamath Newt Pabllihlng Company Entered aa leeond dm matter at the peatofflee of Klamath Falle. Ore., oa Auiuit 10. IMt udtt tot ot eooireee, Uuob a. la's. Vm(r Arorf Btruvav Ot Cnenirmi R.praentd KaMoutty by W'nr-HounuT Co, In. lu fnaelMO, Xev York, t alUe, Chlcaeo. Portland, lot AnteUa. MALCOLM EPLEY Uanafing Editor v1 U? Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY VESTERDAY we paid visit to Tulelake, which is one of the busiest spots in the gt. It is busy because farmers down there - ... w are opening the biggest agri- S '1 cultural season in the history If7"r:;'i ot a community that has made .nunuiiu . w " Farmers down there talk In astronomical figures when dis cussing the potential yield this V yeBr' particularly in potatoes. S 11 We heard one estimate that : placed the probable potato j&.x I crop at a higher figure than kBak. the entire Klamath basin has EPLEY previously produced in a single year. This guess may be high, but it is no guessing that there will be a huge crop. The big worry, of course, Is labor for the harvest. Every possible labor resource must be tapped If the farmers of the Klamath country are to realize fully on the crops they are now undertaking to raise for the war effort. 0 Civic Group IN TULELAKE, we had the pleasant exper ience of visiting the Tulelake Rotary club rith R. D. "Hod" Eller, Klamath Rotarian. Thii active organization of a score or more business men and farmers meets regularly In the annex of the Tulelake church, where ex cellent luncheons are served by the church women. The Tulelake club Is a handy place for Klamath Rotarians to make up their attend ance. Several were on hand at this week's meeting. The president of the club is Pete Bergman, Tulelake plumber and sanitary en gineer for the WRA project, who can throw a quip to any situation with the best toastmaster anywhere. President-elect is Fred McMurphey, whose standing in his business Is indicated by the fact he is vice-president of the big California Woolgrowers association. !Aj we said at the start of this piece, Tule lake Is a busy place. Proof, of that: the Tule lake Rotary club adjourns at 1 o'clock, sharp, Instead of the usual 1:15 for service clubs in more complacent and leisurely communities. i Bearish Talk AS JUST about everybody knows, the Tule lake district Is prosperous and the people down there are the kind' of people, and they, have the kind of land, that makes for getting along all right. But they don't always talk that way. A story was told us about a man who came Into that area from a distant point with a view to settling on Tule lake. He sat down In Earl Ager's big store for half day just to listen to the conversations going on about him. After that experience, he told a local friend that he had changed his mind about staying. Everybody around there, he said, was broke, the country was going to the dogs, and he was going to get out as quickly as he could. He had been over-Impressed by the talk from farmers who are often bearish In their conver sation in the midst of a highly bullish agri ' cultural situation. world together a physical fact which should guide us in arriving at a post-war plan. "What could I find in Mr. Willkies book to protest?" my friends asked. The basic idea; the fundamental principle It set forth; the premise that Mr. Willkie adopted when he wrote the book; the reason for writing it; namely, the conclusion that nearness makes oneness. Mr. Willkie has deluded himself and obviously also deluded a great number of my good readers. Distances never have had anything to do with unity. You may have lived next door to two neighbors for 20 years, barely spoken to one and have become very close to another ' but not nearly so attached as to a friend who lives on the other side of town, or perhaps one in Canada or Labrador. Oneness is made out ot something more spirit ually substantial than distance. It comes from similarity of ideals. - habits, customs, methods of living. Proximity Not Friendliness IF A Chinaman happened to live next door to you and you did not understand his way of life, the proximity would not in itself lead you to be friends. But if you happened to be a fel low Chinaman, or a person who knew the Chinaman's way of life intimately, you might become close friends and might establish a basis of unity. Nations are only groups of people In a world neighborhood, and always have been. We have lived many years an equal distance from both Mexico and Canada. With Canada, we share a valid bond of friendship; with Mexico, we never have. Therefore, Mr. Willkie has erred grievously in his primary idea. He is just plain wrong in his initial assumption that whereas this was many worlds before, the plane has made it one world. It is the same old. world, and, as dis tances have had nothing to do with the estab lishment of our International friendships of the past, they will have, nothing to do with it in the future. ; We like people who like us, who share our views, hopes, and expectations, and we will always continue to like such people and dislike others, regardless of how fast a few can fly back and forth. Mr. Willkie's error Is grievous, because if we now base our hopes of peace on a false assump tion we will not only be disillusioned sadly, but we are likely to have more international - troubles as a direct result, perhaps even war. Only a thoroughly realistic peace can be a last ing peace. New Factors 'THE plane, to be sure, will bring new com' I mercial and military factors into the post war wona. some say u may be possible for a debutante to order a gown straight from Paris by a mail order catalogue for a weekend party. Many people certainly will fly to England in eight hours. A great many people will use the plane for passenger service Instead of boats and it is possible 'commercial travel will event ually develop to an extent not known before. From a military standpoint, it will also be necessary, for our protection, to acquire bases throughout the world from which we may intercept possible air attacks on us. But these are not the things Mr. WJJlkla was ... fi fe lf ii talking about. He spoke of political unity as a AlOUC Rf&nmri TnCk Al OUt primary assumption, but the prospective use ,w"" of the plane commercially and militarily does not itself justify such an assurance. Vila over by the mountain. Usu ally pretty hot spot. We'll know In a minute." Miller banks the bomber and we start thundering over the Japanese runway at medium alti tude. A tiny cloud floats be tween us and the target but bombs crash below with brilliant flashes. A fire starts and we thunder on. The Japanese must have been asleep. We didn't see any searchlights or anything but the smoldering fire. We were over Munda six min utes later. Lieut. Hughes aims for the revetment near the run way. Our bombs splash fire and we are away over the water. Five Japanese searchlights pop on, but grope in the sky in the opposite direction from us. Back into the storm we plunged and had a rough two hours ride towards Guadalcan al. The crew and officer were glum- They'd wanted to show me some excitement a shoot' tag war with alj the fireworks. The bomber dropped down be low the overcast and search lights swept the sky from. Tulagi and Henderson field. "Air rifd," says Miller solemn ly, "can't land now. Maybe we'll catch Washing Machine Charley in the air and shoot him down." One searchlight caught us, rec ognized us and swept on. Two flashes shown from Tulagi eith er bombs or ack ack. We went By PAUL MALLON 'ASHTNGTON, May 6 A substantial num ber of constant readers took pens in hands and jabbed some into me for my column. published April 23, criticizing Mr. Wendell Willkie's fast-sell ing book "One World." The amount of critical mall was as heavy as I have ever received in protest against a column, some saying it was the only column with which they had disagreed so sharply in many a year. Generally, they' pointed out Mr. Willkie advanced no wild new notions of post-war. but merely set forward a reasonable, restrained ac counting of his experiences in flying around the world in 49 days, and he concluded that tha plane had brought the nations of the I ' ,3 J?. MALLON These factors are just as apt to lead to rivalry as oneness. Certainly if rivalry is to ba avoided entirely, the world politicians will have to remake human nature, not only1 here at home but chiefly abroad. What I would consider more Important than Willkie's views is what Stalin- thinks about the future use of the plane and its political effect. And those of Mr. Churchill's one British em- ' pire. ' A few readers accused ' me of trying to "smear" Willkie. I have never smeared any' one. Smear tactics have been so notoriously pursued in several instances, of lata years that they should arouse the outraged Indignation of every man regardless of whether the smeared one is right or wrong. Democracy is a debate to which falsa ideas should be smeared never the personal dignity of the individual. Rain Wets Down South Pacific Bomber Sweep Over Japanese at Kahili Island By OLEN CLEMENTS ABOARD A BOMBER OVER BOUGAINVILLE ISLAND, Sol omons, April 26 (Delayed) (VP) The waning moon has Just risen. Dead ahead is an ominous black cloud. Lightning licks out at us. Pilot Lieut. Robert F. Miller of Elmyran, N. Y., glances at the cloud and frowns. "It looks like it might rain," he says to Co-Pilot Lieut. How ard J. Ladd of Detroit, Mich. It does rain five minutes later. It wasn't Just an ordinary rain. It was a South Sea screamer storm that blew and the rain felt like the B-24 was under a waterfall. The plane bucked and squirmed on towards the Japanese base. "We were the lead plane of a long file scheduled to hit Kahili airport every five minutes for three hours in fading moonlight. The rough weather got worse. V7a climbed. It got colder and rougher. The rear gunners be side open hatches took down what looked like old-fashioned underwear,' back window and all, and slipped it on over their clothes. Then they donned cov eralls to get warm. Up through the bomb bay came Sgt. George Martin of Danville, 111., and said: "Lieut. Miller says Just make yourself at home. We ought to be over Kahili In a few minutes." Sgts, Lee Laughlin of Nowa tack, La;; Jim Hoffman of Ly kens, Pa., and Joseph Michaelak of Chicago unlimbered their guns. Sgt. Robert Lundy, Myr tle Point, Ore., engineer, fiddled with some electrical switches on the flight deck. Navigator Lieut. Harold Thayer, Portland, Ore., checked charts while extra Navi gator Lieut. Milford Stephens, Denver, double checked him. Flight Bombardier William D.l Hugnes, bpoKane, wash., stepped up on the bomb bay catwalk and began pulling pins from bombs. 1 mosey through the flight deck and stand behind the pilot and co-pilot. Both are peering straight ahead. It is as black as the insldes of a cow outside. No one says a word. I begin to think of many stories I've been told ot South Pacific pilots flying into such storms and never being heard from again. Then I remembered that Group Commander Col. William A. Matheny, Spokane,' Wash., said that Raunchy Miller would get back from the mission if anybody got back. The bomber begins to pitch violently. Rain pours in through leaks in the top and sides. "Well," Miller sighs, "it's no use, hate to disappoint you, but we can't get in. Maybe the boys behind us will make it later, He turns the plane around and says: "Let's try Vila and Mund airports. ' No use lugging these bombs back it we can hit some Japs with them." We buck the storm another halt an hour. It's a rough ride and at times I'm afraid the plane is going to pieces in the wind. Suddenly there is a break In the clouds. We burst out into the moonlight over the island "Kolambangara," says Sgt, Martin, "Purty, ain't she. There's SIDE GLANCES 1 . IbSfe dA) eC9 1W wt HVl MVlf J INT. T U Mn (l PAT. OA Yes. bill I'm utmost old piiniiL'h lo enlist in Ihn Miirinesl 1 1 feel like Benedict Arnold when everybody asks how" my sister doing in the WAACsl out over the channel for a few minutes and came in when the all clear was given. i Footprinters to Hold District Meet at Cal-Ore The annual district meeting of Footprinters will be held Tues day, May 18, at Cal-Ore tavern with Dunsmuir, Yreka, Medford and Klamath Falls chapters represented. Sgt. Lester Finley of the United States marines, president ot the local chapter, will preside. Dinner will be served at 8 p. m. and provided by Yreka and Dunsmuir chapters, with entertainment by the Medford and Klamath Falls groups. Telling The Editor Ittton prtnlol Mn mutl mi t moro IMa M nor I lonsth. mull M ll. i mi Hiwr m oni iids oi im imp" tnty, and tml M tlrMd. Oonlrlbutlom WEEDS ON ALAMEDA KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., (To the Editor) Yesterday over the radio I heard two gentlemen talking about taking care of weeds. Now I think if the city council members will come along Alameda avenue from Erie street to the Hillside hospital mid see the weeds along the cunnl that we all love to look ot and fight all summer and full, some thing will be done about it. We all have nice homes along this street and are trying to have nice lawns and also gar dens, and we can't have them if those weeds are allowed to con tinue year after year. Some of us asked the park men to use their gas lawn mower on It, but they Informed us that tho yucd patch belonged to the city. Can't we have something dons about ItT It could be mowed now and wouldn't hnve weeds over two feet high this full with seeds blowing every place. It would be better to lot some ono use it for a potato patch than to let it grow up into weeds. How about it? MRS. HARRIS SHEPHARD, 333 Alameda Ave. In 1042, the National Safoty council says, 2000 persons were killed and 4700 injured in grade crossing accidents. Tho motor ist must assume mujor respon sibility for preventing these accidents. SHERIFF'S POSSE P The Klumath sheriff's posse made plans for Its summer activ ities at a meeting held Wednes day evening. It was announced the posse will rldo In the Slop Forest Fires parudo Friday noon, with all members mooting at tho fair grounds at 11 a. m. to assemble at Balslger's gnrage In time for the parade. Women members may rldo In tho parado. Twenty-seven attended the Wednesday evening dinner ut the Pelican cafe, at which plans woro mndo for holplng In cele bration of the Fourth of July here. A ride will be hold Muy 10. with both men and women rid ers leaving the fairgrounds at 0 a. m. In churgo aro Vic Douglas, Wliltey Goodwin and Debs Polls. Although thoy hnvn six legs, dragontllos cannot walk. GRAY HAIR TURNING DEEP BLACK says Mrs. J. B Chicago "Altef utJnitCjrayvlitontya r short time. 1 noticed my (V M gray hair turning to A Jsw Bfc mtlctMp Uck.ctlr It L I If utcil in bn. NVlut a dirfrr 1 Jo ft tucti this nuke In my h Lm 4V Mi. nauM rwrttmra Mv nr nuv luit h ilifltralit nun yuun. itv not uj nn i un( piumr tck If not Mitouctory. 'Hi anii-uy hair vttsmln dUrovtry when ttle by a Tcjiiiril maxHitna show! M of proont ttttnl had pusiUve svulrK at aumsi return of luir otlnr. Al'iKAYVITrX Inhlft U 10 mm.of Caldum PtnluttMnstf) 1'UJS AM U.S. 1'. untla of "pep vtumln Hi. Cict CRAYVITA rwwl dy sup ply I1JV. 1) clay tupplr Him. 1'hon UU ounniN'i for onuoi COMING! WEDNESDAY, MAY 12 Herb Miller (Glen's Brother) ' And His '' Orchestra ARMORY Dancing 9 Till 1 High School Seniors GIRLS WESTERN UNION OFFERS YOU An opportunity to attend one of their Telegraph Training Schools. You wilt learn Automatic Telegraphy and all phases ot Communication work. Dignified Fascinating Essential Traveling Expenses Furnished Salary while learning Regular Position After 8 Week Count Retpilrementst Seme typing ability, free to travel. Willing to learn. Apply In Person WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY 716 Main BU Some metals used in aircraft are so difficult to wold that a fingerprint on their surface will increase the mntul'i resistance, craato more hout and notice, ably affect tho strength of Uta weld seam. Wartime bus made more and more peoplu turn up their alooves at work and fower their noses. OFFICIAL U.S. ARMY AIR CORPS 120th Observation Squadron Insigne FREE with War Stamps bought flits week at Shell Dealers and Shell Station Get your U.S. Fighter anil Ob servation Sqtimlroil insignia the kind youngsters are collect ing now I In lull color on cloth, they're just right to sew on pocketi, csp or sweaters. You get one of these insignia FREE while the supply laits every time you buy War Stamps from your Shell Dealer or Shell Serv ice Station. And XTTK watch for the next uwtlH new insigne! v'vi' "CAR! FOR YOUR CAR FOR YOUR COUNTRY" Remember, not the ifnJ'ttln, but the hJar Ii your btn julil now4yil Once a Week: ATTIKY Kc Jurtd drivfnf nuiM Shell chcck-upi nl water level and charge more Important than ever. TIMI-Milntalnlni correct air prtuuia aarei tires and gatoline. Every 2 Months: Oil Hare crankest drained, tluihed and refilled nlih Uoldrs Shell Motor Oil. SHUIUSRICATION Thorough, correct lubrication vital In mak big your car but tor the duratioe, SHELL OIL COMPANY JncorporottJ THE REASON that sugar is rationed is not to deny you sugar . . . it's to make sure that you and 135,000,000 other U. S. citizens can all share the available supply of this great energy food. How much sugar you will be allotted this summer for table use and for canning will de pend on many things. One of these factors is the amount of sugar America produced last season. We're proud that western sugar beet growers and SpreckelsSugarCompany,workingtogether, were able to add 300,000,000 lbs. of Honey Dew sugar to the nation's supply. All in a single season, f Three hundred million pounds is a lot ot sugar In any part of the world. Produced on our West Coasts it will go a long way toward helping meet Army, Navy and Lend-Lease needs and millions of civilians' needs as well. It's good le knew thai this home-grown Honey Paw sugar It as pure and tweet and fine In grain at any sugar in the world. Perfect for labia use Ideal for home canning; Get your full share all that U.S. ration coupons pro vide for your family. Sprockets Honey Dew Is available at most grocery stores. It's a sugar we know you'll Ilk. SPREGKELS SUGAR COMPANY Sipom taw mZ . IV , , ',J O v -