Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 07, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
May 7, 1945
itimbtr
Tn Awcum Puss
YlM AwodtHd frtM It aet
ita.ly .oUtlad to th na. or ro
paMlntloa of all kii dllpitctiea
eridltad to I or oot othtrwlia
r41td ta Uifi pDer alao
Ui local nm t-uMl.had thtrtla.
All rlihu of rfptiMlutloa of
tpotltl dLpatdwa at. alao r
WTldi
, FRANK JENKINS
Bder
A temporary mmMottlon of th Krwlnt Rtrtld ut
th Klamath New, Publtthed jry ilurnoon txctpl
Rucda at Eaplanadt and Fin itmli, Klamath Falfa,
Oregon, bj tb lUriM runiiibiDi Co. and tba KlamaUi
Ktva PublUhlng Company
Xetrd at aroond data uatUr at tha poitoffic of
Klamatb. faJla, Or., oa Autiiit to, IKM under act of
eoofrtaa, March lira.
Mtmbtr of Amur i
Bvuav Or Craccxanow
RtpraBtd Katloaaltf by
AVliT-HoLtlDAT Co., IkC
ffaa Prmnetico, Kw Tort, (
atUa, Cblcago, iSiriUnd, 1x4
Ad fit! e.
MALCOLM EPLEY
Managing Editor
Today's Roundup
Br MALCOLM EPLEY
THIS oountry can become so bound up In regu
lation! that it is paralyzed, and sometimes
wi think the paralyzing proc
l eM nM reachea "n advanced
. itage. There are thousands of
people aomg nouiing oui writ
ing more regulations, and no
doubt most of them have soma
one overhead who is writing
regulations on how to write
regulations.
U'BV'eI We need not go on much
JV's-r i farther on this line, for every
kM body knows what we are talk-
EPLEY lng about. One would suppose,
with a war demanding the utmost in produc
tive activity from everyone, that there would
ba a movement to remove the obstacles to that
kind of endeavor.' Instead, the whole tendency
of government is to place more of them in tha
path.
What inspired this growl this morning was
a glance over a statement which 'tells what a
minor, under 18 yean of age, has to do to go
to work.
Now there are hundreds of thousands of boys
and girls in the early and middle 'teens who
can kelp out tremendously in a period of man
power and womanpower shortage. Because
there have been abuses of child labor, laws and
regulations on this type of labor have been
built up to such an extent that getting this ad
ditional help into cction now, when it is bad
ly needed, is an involved and difficult pro
cedure. If we used good sense, we would sim
plify tt for the duration.
How To Go to Work
THE most serious difficulty is the birth cer
tificate requirement. Because it will serve
two purposes demonstrating the problem of
involved regulations and informing the pub
lie what a minor must do to work we will out
line here what appears in a bulletin from the
employment office and the high school voca
tional training department. It is entitled "In
formation Regarding Procurement of Work
Permit and Birth Certificates."
If one 'has a birth certificate and has been
hired for a job, he or she must go to the U. S.
employment office and there obtain a 10-day
work permit. At the end of 10 days, a per
manent permit will be issued, good only for
the firm by which the applicant is now em
ployed. That sounds fairly simple, although it may
not be as simple as it sounds. But that method
is only for those fortunate folks who have birth
eerttrieetec
If one doesn't have a birth certificate, he
must do this: first, obtain written evidence from
the state or county in which he was born show
ing that he was born and when. This must then
ba taken to the county clerk's office at the
ourtbouse. The clerk will give blanks which
must be filled out and taken to the district at
torney'i office. The district attorney will ac
cept service. The form then must be taken
back to the circuit court clerk and a fee of $1
paid. After five days,' the evidence of birth
must be presented to the circuit judge, and he
will, issue a birth certificate. For an additional
lee of 50 cents, the county clerk will provide
a certified copy of the certificate.
That's, all that has to be done to get a birth
certificate, and that is the simplified procedure
provided in new Oregon law. What it was like
before can only be imagined. (Let us pray that
the birth record doesn't list the applicant as
"Baby Smith" or "Baby Jones.". That will start
off a new time-consuming procedure.)
All Minors Must Have 'Em
AFTER obtaining birth certificate, our young
friend who wants to go to work will have
to go about the matter of getting a work permit
through the employment service office.
Every boy and girl between 14 and 18 who
want to work must have the permit. But boys
nd girls under 18 years of age can only work
In a few occupations. Boys and girls between
16 and 18 are prohibited from work in some
cases, regulated by special laws (Reference or
der No. 9, minor's state wage and hour com
mission.) An occupational list may be obtained
at the U. S. employment service or the voca
tional department at KUHS.
The information bulletin we have been quot
ing concludes with this:
"Do not go to the U. S. employment office
without a birth certificate, a delayed birth cer
tificate, baptismal certificate, insurance policy
issued more than a year ago, or an authentic
Bible record. The local labor shortage may be
helped by following the above instructions."
That is no doubt true, if one can follow them.
Preparation of this bulletin for local distri
bution was a proper thing to do, for it should
help smooth the way toward employment of
minors in the types of work they can do with
out harm to themselves and for the good of
productive endeavor. The procedure is involved,
but one has to know what It Is in order to
fight through it to the point where he can turn
in a job.
This sort of thing is giving our youngsters,
who want to go to work, an early taste of offi
cial regulation, red tape and delay, If things
keep on their present course, the adults of to
morrow will go to bed and get up by govern
ment rule and only after filling out the re
quired forms.
k it
MALLON
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
Washington, May 7 The great peace
which filled the public statements of
warring executive officials
caused none of those involved
to file off their finger nails
They are all still ready for
scratching.
The peace treaty effected
between Rubber-Maker Jcffers
and War-Maker Patterson is
attributed significantly
1 enough to Ferdinand Ebcr-
stadt, the New Yorker who
left the war production board
In the Nelson row and then
was unable to get his promised position in the
army.
Senators have direct information that Eber
stadt brought Jeffers and Patterson together at
, luncneon and, under his bench auspices, both
threw their arms around each other and agreed
10 raxe a irip around the country to see if thei
conflicting claims for machinery could not be
.worKea out amicably.
The strange identity of the peacemaker,' a
"l wno naa peen urea by Mr. Nelson, has en
.uiuaKi h wrae variety of speculation. The
most natural deducation was that Mr. Nelson'
demies were again on the loose, and
this speculation was in nowise diminished when
Nelson Immediately thereafter appointed Arthur
Whiteside as director of a new office of civilian
requirements. ,
Mr. Nelson indignantly den foil Via TIT Q C? rolm
ming Mr. Jeffers, but most of the newspapers
..6,. umcrwise, ana not without justifica
tion, as Whiteside was apparently given control
"coining m ruDOer except production
inereiore, while the dove of
in the headlines, he has been constantly flitting
from shoulder to shoulder, losing feathers as he
'.'
Pay-os-You-Go Battle
THE Robertson-Forand Pay-as-you-go-tax plan
I passed the house as a compromise, and on
the surface it was one. Mr. Robertson is a Vir
ginia democrat, more democrat than New Deal-
... iur. rorana is a Rhode Island New Dealer
"m".mj .ouur,
Their bill, which the house passed, is about
seven-tenths of the Ruml plan. It would lift
$7,000,000,000 of the $10,000,000,000 burden
from 1942 personal income taxes and put a
pay-as-you-go system in operation after July 1
But essentially, in basic, theory, It is the CIO
way of doing the Job. It makes Mr. Robertson
angry to say so (but not Mr. Forand).
The original theory of a 19 per cent withhold
ing tax (now made 20 per cent) was proposed
by democratic Senator Bennett Clark, of Mis
souri, and the CIO took it up along with a de
mand for discrimination in relieving the burden
of various incomes. All are not treated alike.
The CIO no doubt will hail the result as a vic
tory.
The republicans put It through when they
were unable to get their Ruml plan. In doing
so, they merely corrected a strategic error com
mitted two months ago. - - -
They could have done the same thing, but
chose to send the proposal back to the house
ways and means committee, hoping the Ruml
plan would finally emerge. Their idea now is
that the senate will have a chance to iron the
matter out and it will.
The Robertson-Forand plan, however, is In
disputably the most complicated tax suggestion
ever enacted by a congress. Most taxpayers
will require a lawyer to find out to what they
are entitled.
SIDE GLANCES
Daylight Bombing Losses
f ROWING losses suffered by our Flying
Fortresses in daylight bombings on Ger
many are proof enough that the nazls have
developed new methods of defending themselves
against our best weapon.
The developments are in tactics rather than
in counter weapons. They martial groups of six
or seven attackers against outside planes in our
formation and also look sharply for stragglers.
Some of the growth of losses on the last few
raids can be attributed to the facts that our for
mations were not closely maintained. .
It is too much to assume off-hand, therefore,
that these losses will cause us to drop daylight
raiding, as the British did or that even the
loss of 30 RAF bomber In the Dortmund raid
means diminution of our main current attack
on Germany.
The British rate of losses In night raids has
lately run about one in 20, and if 600 planes
were involved in the Dortmund attack, the loss
of 30 planes would not be extraordinarily significant.
Tunisian Betting v
THE Bon peninsula to which the nazls might
choose to retire from Tunis, Is somewhat
like Bataan, mountainous, with good beaches,
and- no ports. But there is one exception no
Corrcgldor fortresses to back it up. Hitler's
do-or-die hordes might choose to die there.
But certainly the end should come sooner
than at Bataan, and betting is heavy here that
the Tunisian situation will be cleared up with
in a month at most.
NEW YORK VP) Annunzlo
Immedlato, 26, Is going to spend
one time In Sing Sing prison
all because he talked In his sleep.
Immedlato, authorities said,
deserted his legal wife several
months ago, married a second
woman, then returned to wife
Ko, 1. Ha talked In his deep,
however, and spilled the beans
to his first wife.
' Ho pleaded guilty to bigamy
in Bronx county court and drew
a one to two year sentence.
A BIT THICK
BORGER, Tex. () Hugh
Cypher tossed off what he
thought was a nightcap of but
termilk. He spent a painful next day,
then quizzed his family.
What he thought was butter-
milk was prepared pancake bat
ter. ..
!
v....
cent iu it Nta srnvrer wc. t. . mo. o. . ft. orr. - 7
"You've sold so much insurance since I left tlmt when the
war's over I'll just come homo and do the housework!
! esUrdu3jti
m
ago and 10 years noo
Si'lii!!-'
ycorj
liPl'll!
From the Klamath Republican
May 7. 1903
At a meeting of the town
board this week there was a dis
cussion of a plan for putting
electric bells in the homes of
members of the fire department.
No decision was made.
Alvin Sloan has been named
deputy county clerk by Clerk J.
H. Driscoll.
From the Klamath Newt
May 7, 1933
Despite chill winds, the Klam
ath Pelicans came through to
win the northern California
southern Oregon track meet on
Modoc field Saturday. Grants
Pass proved Klamath's hottest
competitor.
LAKE VIEW Approximate
ly 30,000 fleeces have been sold
here to Boston wool buyers at 17
cents per pound.
Oil Consumers
May Get Fuel in
Summer Months
PORTLAND, May 7 UP) Fuel
ou consumers will receive ap
proximately 45 per cent of their
year's supply under the OPA's
summer fill-up plan, George Cur
ry, fuel oil rationing officer, said
today.
All coupons for the heating
period ending September 30,
1!J44, will be mailed out by ra
tion boards June S, he said. This
will enable fuel oil distributors
to coordinate deliveries.
lark?
The Editor
Littm p'lmM hrt mml not & mcr
than SM word. In Itnith, muil b writ
ten liiibly en ONE tlDl of trM pjpw
only, and tnuot tM tlrtL Contrloutlam
rollowinc thuo rule., ar. warmly twat-oomo.
Fish Commission
Reports Salmon
At Bonneville Dam
ASTORIA, May 7 UPi More
Chinook salmon made their way
over the fish ladders at Bonne
ville dam during the last week
of April than in the entire month
last year, the state fish commis
sion reported today.
The count waa 12,303, as com
pared with 9506. The week's fig
ure was 20 times higher than
for the previous week, when
only 634 fish were counted. Ef
fect of the April 30 opening of
tne commercial fishing season
was shown by a drop In the
count from 4168 on April 29 to
2253 on May 1.
Pup Tent Really
Lives Up to Name
CAMP WHITE, May 7 (7P
The pup tent, soldier's slang for
the army's shelter tent, finally
has lived up to its name.
Privates Virgil Warren and
Ralph Malone report that dur
ing recent field maneuvers the
company mascot chose their nun
tent in which to give birth to
six pups.
MOTHER
Mother Is the greatest, grandest
thing on earth.
Greatest, grandest, amid sorrow
and mirth.
Mother, so knowing, loving and
true;
Mother, who speaks comfort to
mo and to you.
Mother, who suffered and gave
eirtn
And brought a Savior to earth.
Mother guided the steps of the
Christ Child
In a world of sin and beguile.
Mother, who is the backbone of
this world.
Mother, when this world Is In
war and turmoil..
Mother, when this conquest shall
cease,
Mother, when tills world Is again
in peace.
Mother whom God gave a love
that cannot be told.
Mother, when you go wrong al
ways tries the good, you to
behold.
Mother who never leaves you
alone
When you stumble and fall on
life's road.
Mother, who through the lonely
hours of night?
Prays God to guide your steps
arignt.
Mother, when from the right
patn you had strayed:
Mother, all her faith in God was
staid.
Mother, who taught you to pray
ui Jesus ana Mis blessed way,
Mother, who to Heaven has gone
And with Jesus, is beckoning,
come.
BEULAH STROBERGOR,
Box 15, Keno Ore.
Highway Men Eye
Overloading of
Logging Trucks
SALEM, May 7 (Methods
of preventing log haulers from
overloading their trucks will be
the main item of business for the
state highway commission at Its
meeting In Portland next Tues
day and Wednesday, H. B. Glais-
yer, commission secretary, said
today. '
The commission also will open
bids on $140,000 worth of road
projects, consider whether to
hold a conference with Washing
ton and California highway offi
cials, decide whether to conv
plete right-of-way negotiations
along the Wolf Creek highway,
ana aecme what to do with fall
en timber in state parks.
Mabhetl and fyincutcial
HEAVY SELLING
SWEEPS STOCK
I A
L
Potatoes
WORLD'S HEAT RECORD
Between 1929 and 1931, Death
Valley, Calif., went 401 days
without measurable precipita
tion. This section of the United
States held the world's heat rec
ord from 1913 to 1922, with a
scorching temperature of 134 degrees.
ANNOUNCEMENT!
DR. BOYD F. SPRAGUE
will be located at the
KLAMATH MEDICAL CLINIC
after
Monday, May 3rd
TELEPHONE 5274
By VICTOR EUBANK
NEW YORK. Mny 7 (tV)
Heavy profit selling swept ovc:
me stock market In the final
hour of today's proccccllmis and.
after seven successive rising ses
sions, leaders dipped 1 to 2
points.
Rails led the downswing
around mid-day. Prices were
hesitant from the start but there
were Individual spots of strength.
Transfers were in the neighbor
hood of 2,500,000 shares. It was
the fifth day in a row in which
volume topped the two-million
aggregate. t
Wavering stocks included
American Telephone, Southern
Pacific, Great Northern. U. S.
Steel, Chrysler, Douglas Air
craft, Spcrry and Intarnnilonul
Harvester. Recording best levels
for 1943 or longor were Mont
gomery Ward, Du Pont, J. I.
Case, Budd Mfg., common ami
preferred, Pepsi-Cola and Stand
ard Oil (NJ).
Bonds were stoady with se
lected rails favored.
Closing quotations:
American Can 8-11
Am Car i Fdy 3BJ
Am Tel & Tel 1501
Anaconda 2BH
Calif Packing 271
Cat Tractor 47
Comm'nw'lth tt Sou ..! J
General Electric 37 1
General Motors 81 J
Gt Nor Ry pfd 3H
Illinois Central .. 15
Int Harvester 04 i
Kennccott 328
Lockheed 221
Long-Bell "A" 10
Montgomery Ward 42J
Nash-Kelv 93
N Y Central 18R
Northern Pacific 17.
Pac Gas & El 28J
Packard Motor 4i
Penna R R 30J
Ropublic Steel 171
Richfield Oil 01
Safeway Stores - 381
Sears Roebuck 70 3
Southern Pacific 281
Standard Brands 71
Sunshine 'Mining fit
Trans-America i. OK
Union Oil Calif 1 0 t
Union Pacific 91
U S Steel 551
Warner Pictures 13 J
WHEAT
CHICAGO, May 7 lFi Whent
prices dropped about a cent to
day In a persistent downturn as
selling from houses with south
western connections met little
buying power. Liquidation ap
parently was based upon more
favorable growing weather for
crops In some sections of the
hard wheat bolt.
Oats were steady at the start,
but slumped later along with the
bread cereal.
Wheat sank rapidly near the
end and closed 11-2 cents lower,
May $1,441, July $1.43i-i, corn
was unchanged at ceilings, May
$1.05, oats were i-lc lower and
rye lost 11-1 ic.
Hans Norland, Fire Insurance.
CHICAGO, May 7 (AP-SDA)
Potatous, urrlviila 16; on track
15; total US snipmunts 463; now
stock: supplies very light, de
mand good, market firm at coll
ing; old stock: no sales reported;
Loulsiunu 100 lb. sucks Bliss Tri
umphs, generally good quality
$4.10-30; Culifornln 100 lb.
Long Whiles US No. 1, $4.74;
Commercials $4.03.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO,
May 7 (AP-USDA) CATTLE:
25. Nominal for wook. Medium
lduho steers $14.75, few loads
medium gruss steers $14.00
$15.00; medium to good range
hulfers and cows, absent, nearby
she-stock 50 to 75 lower; medium
bulls $11.00-512. 00. Calves:
None. Nominal good to choice
vealcrs quotod $16.00-$16.00.
HOGS: 100. Steady. Ono load
good to choice 275-lb. barrows
and gilts $15.40; few good sows
quoted $14.25.
SHEEP: 200. Good to cholco
-spring lambs quoted $15.00-$15.75.
WPB LIMITS
LUMBER USE
TO SERIES
PORTLAND, Ore., May 7 (AP
USDA) CATTLE: Sulablo 25,
total 125; calves salable none,
total 25; pructlcally nothing
available; cows and bulls In good
demand; steers slow, compared
week ago fully 25 lower; other
classes mostly steady; good fed
steers salablo to $16.00 or above,
week's extremo top $17.00; top
heifers $16.00; canner and cut
ter cows $7.00-$9,25; fat dairy
type cows eligible to $11.00,
good young beef cows to $13.50;
mod I urn-good bulls $12.00
$14.00; good choice vealors
$15.00$ 16.50.
HOGS: Salable 25, total 150;
nothing offered early, market
quotable, steady; good-choice
180-230 lbs. salable to $14.75;;
good sows $13.00-80; feeder pigs!
$10.50-$18.00. j
SHEEP: Salablo none, total;
50; market nominal; good-cholco
spring lambs quotable $15.00-;
50; fed shorn lambs salablo i
$15.25 down; good wooled ewes
quolablo to $8.00; shorn kinds
$7.00 down.
CHICAGO, May 7 (P) Sola-,
bio hogs 7000; total 14,500; open
ing fairly active, steady to 5
higher than Thursday's average;
lator trade slow; closed with ear
ly advance lost; top $14.85; bulk
good and cholco 180-300 lbs.
$14.80-80; most good and cholco
180-130 lbs. $14.00-60; sows little
SEATTLE, Moy 7 OF) Tha
war production board has re
stricted the uso of seven species
of western lumber almost en
tirely to essential military needs, ,
effective May 13, thu office of
war information announced.
Tho lumber so restricted In
cludes all Pondorosa pine, sugur
pine, Idaho whltu plno, white
fir, ladgepolo plno, Engelmaun
sprueo and western white spruca
except shingles, lath or railroad
cro.is-tlcs,
Tho announcement explalnod
that domandt for military boxing
and crating niada'lt necassary to
stop unessential consumption.
The order uffects about 800
producers in 12 states, It was
reported. They cun soli or de
liver the restricted lumber to
the central procuring agency of
the corps of engineers, to othor
designated government agencies,
10 iaiid-leasa nations und to
their contractors and sub-contractors.
Essential civilian needs will be
covered by specific authoriza
tion from tho war production
board.
changed: bulk good 3U0-5S0 lbs.
sows $14.35-60.
Soluble cattle 700; calves 300;
generally steady market; very
slow and uneven, however, with
undertone weak on all grades
and classes; no strictly choice
steers here; best $16.40; scvoral
loads $13.75-$I6.00; two 1 o a d s
good to choice light weights Col
orado fed steers $16.00-40; helf-
ors very scarce, run largely
cows; market steady but dull,
with cutters at $0.00-$10.25; light
canners down to $7.00; and most
commonn and medium beef cows
$1 1.00-91 2.S0; strictly good cows
absent; bulls stoady with
wolghty sausage offerings $13.75
down; venters unchanged at
$15.00-$16.00.
Salable sheep 10,000; total 10,
800; late Thursday: fat Iambs
strong; spots 10 higher; good
to cholco 00-110 lbs. wooled
lambs $10.00-25; top $16.25; ono
double cholco 105 lbs. weights
shorn In September $15.85; good
to cholco 88-112 lbs. fed western
shorn lumbs with No. 1 and 2
pelts $14.50 $15.35; mostly; few
$15.40; sheep steady.
For exquisite, dcllcne flavor use
this pun Vanilla in cake rccipei.
Extra itrcnglh and quality everr
drop laden with real lemon davor.
Schilling
fUT WAR STAMPS ON YOUI IHOfUNO HIT
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
Quite a stack of newspapers ! lelf Jfau
yesterday, Judge. Aren't goin' in tho news
paper business, are you?"
"No, I just enjoy reading different
papers so my nephew George sends them
to me whenever he takes a business trip,
1 got a big kick out of some ho sent me
from several counties where they still have
pohibition, Particularly from some head
lines that read 'Drunk Driving Arrests Rise'.
Bootleffgera must post Celling Prices1
' Federal Agents seize' Trick' Liquor Truck'.
Doesn't that go to prove, Joe, that prohibi
tion dots not prohibit?
"I watched conditions pretty carefully
during our 13 years of prohibition in this
country. The only thing I could see we got
out of it was bootleg liquor instead ol legal
liquor... plus the worst crime and corrup
tion this country has ever known." "
,.tlMi.ai &JtttM t$AkMU Jtaaaroi. itatfiufraat, f M.