My 26. 1913 PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON ittmber f Tn AaaocuTsa Fua too Auotltfi tnu U owlo Irtlr oaUUot Is U bh of ro. oublleoUoo of til ft dlpoUio OTflU4 klOHl OlllUVtM (roSIM M tills popor. Ud ol SM toed Mn mblUbod thorolo. n MihU at ropublleoUoo of opooHl dlptrbt an olio ro Mm. FRANK JENKINS ' Sditor A temporary eoabtaitloa of tti Vvtatof HtrsJd id4 th Kluaath Xewu Pu bits bed iwj afUnwoo xep tuadaj at Baplukd u4 Pin ttrfrtU, Klamftth rll, Ortgoa. by lh Herald PuMUiitoi Co. ed tat EUattt Xtvi PaMWhtof Comrt&y KatoM-od ctwd dM mitter at Ui potttoffM of Klamath Fail. On., oa Aufust to, IK uodw act of ooBTMii March A. 1ITR. JfmW 0 Avwt Bvwv Of Cxbcuutiow mmtoM KaUoaally by Weit-Houxdat Co I KG. Paa FraadKo, Xev Tork. Aa atU. C6Jcr Porttaod, Loa MALCOLM EPLEY Mtnafimg Editor LIU EPLEY Today's Roundup Br MALCOLM EPLEY NOT much attention is pld here to slate politic these day. Keeping up with nation al politics, which teem to effect us more, ii tfWt, ..r.t-f$ job enough, what with the war I . - and other things that Keep I -r"tl? nennls here busy. f 1 II Hence, we are aomewhat CV'V 1 surprised to learn that there irf-V-i somethin8 cooking in that old fuss about the state tax . . -1 . . .. . if commission uiui okutcu up before the last election. It will be recalled that a yowl was raised in Portland over a change in the basis of assessments there a change. Incidentally, that was in keeping with the state law, although It was effected' belatedly by the tax commission. Earl Snell advocated, a one-man tax commis sion (there are three members now) in his cam paign, thus capitalizing on the Multnomah coun ty gripe over the assessment business. When the legislature met. Governor Snell's proposal for a one-man commission was turned down. That reflected informed opinion that the tax commission had not been so sinful as painted, and it was even suspected that Mr. Snail, a fair-minded man, was not particularly hot about the proposed change. It Is now reported that Secretary of State Robert Farrell wants to toss out two members of the three-man commission Charles V. Gallo way and Earl Fisher. Farrell, with Governor Snail and State Treasurer Scott, serves on the board of control, which appoints the commis sion. Most of us at a distance had supposed that the. legislature's action on the tax commission issue had constituted an endorsement of Gallo way and 'Fisher, and that they would ride through at least to the end of their terms. Ex-Governor Sprague, in his column in the Salem Statesman, warns Governor Snell against lotting Secretary Farrell grab the ball and remove Galloway and Fisher. He says Farrell's raported program sounds like a personal ven detta. We don't know about the personal angles, but it sounds like good sense to us to retain lloway and Fisher until their terms are com pleted. They are competent tax men with plenty of experience. They have the confidence of the people we know here who are vitally interested in state tax matters. Their value overshadows whatever mistakes were made, if any, in the Multnomah assessment business. . Commando Finance THERE seems to have been some slight con fusion develop in the public prints over the financial problems of the Commandos, our fine girls' service organization. We nave been asked here to put down the facts so that all may know. The Commandos receive, from the city troop hospitality committee, the money for paying lights and janitor service for their downtown canter. The hospitality committee, of course, provides music and certain other expenses . when there is a large troop movement through here. Otherwise, the Commandos finance all their many activities through donations and through their own money raising enterprises, such as dances and the concession at the Saturday night armory dances. Such projects as bring ing wounded fighting men here are financed in that way.. The reason the Commandos showed some con tent over the question, is that they want the public to know their money-raising activities end the donations are essential to the financing f their program. Those who donate to the Commandos, and help them out otherwise in these activities, are helping in keeping their fine program going. That's it. We hope it clears up any mis understanding. .-. Victory Garden Problem OUR friend, Herschel Morris, of the tele phone company, has a victory garden prob lem that is peculiar to our country. Herschel has a garden on Lakeshore drive. He not only has to fight bugs and grubs and the other things ordinary gardeners contend with, but he. also copes with a band of wild geese. The geese invade his garden regularly and at the things that are coming up there. It's problem that some of our grain farm ers will understand. Ex-Governor Sprague, whose comment on the tax commission issue was mentioned above, has Joined the ranks of signed columnists. His column, "It Seems to Me," appears daily on the front page of the Oregon Statesman, Jump ing to the editorial page. Drawing considerably on rich experience gained as governor of the state for four years, he presents comment that is lively, informative and interesting. It is a valuable addition to the Statesman's interesting features. News Behind ihe News Br PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, May 28 The existence of a popular following eagerly intent on electing Mr. Wendell Willkle president next year has been discloses; to me in reader mail reaction to my critical comments concerning his "One World" ideas. It seems particularly strong in New England and the east, is somewhat "young republi can," and considerably fem inine. The political basis upon which it rests is Interesting and significant of our confused MALLON times. It is republican, but It denounces practically all the other leaders of the republican, party with an enthusiasm matched only by New Dealers in denouncing their adversaries. It is anti-Roosevelt, but apparently espouses the Roosevelt courses in general on the pri mary international issues of the day, the Issues which are likely to continue to be foremost on the next election day. From these anomalies, it is evident that it is a purely personal movement. Mr. Willkie is a somewhat dramatic figure who gets more at tention in the press and elsewhere than any other political figure except Mr. Roosevelt. The idea behind it is that Mr. Willkie be pro Roosevelt internationally and anti-Roosevelt domestically, and thus set out to beat Roosevelt for the fourth term. But the scope of other republicans whom they denounce cast serious practical doubts upon their ability to nominate Mr. Willkie in any iruiy repuoucan garnering. They are against everyone else except possibly Governor Stassen, of Minnesota, and they are not so sure of Stassen since his critical review of "One World" in the New York Times. . Republican Partv Solir THEY are against most all the republican Senators anrl rpnrpwnfaltioH anA Bnuftrnnr. elected in the republican victory last November oecause iney are against Willkie. This has caused a split in the party which no longer can be hidden but the split can hardly be said to be in Willkie's favor. The other leaders frankly suggest Willkie is not a republican, and should run on the democratic ticket. One even has said he is "Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt put together." Obviously therefore, the split is not working in favor of the republican cause or Indeed, the anti-Roosevelt cause in general. The obvious gainer is Mr. Roosevelt, whom the Willkie following most dislikes. The presi dent is thus able to cut into the republican party oh the lead inp Isium of th Aav issues are hardly being mentioned by anyone.) Although Mr. Willkie's nomination as a re publican candidate thus seems impossible in view of his opposition within, the situation seems to present possibilities of a third party a Willkie party which would split the anti Roosevelt vote. Some republican leaders al ready profess to expect it. They are pointing to an answer he made in a Look magazine Questionnaire recently in which he seemed to place men and ideas above party. But his 1 friends have passed word around in the middle west unofficially, of course that he will support whomever is nom inated at the next republican convention. . . Peculiar Situation THIS, then, is the practical political basis of a peculiar situation, which already has begun to surge upon 1944 prospects. It is much too early to go Into the ideaiogical angles, because neither Mr. Roosevelt nor Mr. Willkie has taken a positive stand about post-war, but both have merely been playing around with hinted -suggestions or generalities for public debate. Neither has proposed a plan. When they do, the policy lines may be more clearly drawn. But the sum total of the situation to date suggests Mr. Willkie's exceptionally earnest fol lowers stand very little chance even to nomin ate, much less to elect him, but that they might aid materially in re-electing Mr. Roosevelt for a fourth term. SIDE GLANCES ccro. iou w mt mna. uct.mnm ht. m, "Maybe I won't be Hie town umpire this year uie uoys gone, 1 ni geuing in snape so 1 can get and pitch a game!" with all in there From the Klamath Republican Mar 3. 1803 Following officers of the Xlamath High Alumni associa tion ware elected this week: Eleanor Boyd, president: Lena Applegate, vice president; Roy Hamaker, secretary and treasur er. . Tot SaleOne platform spring wagon, also single buggy, good tngle driving mare and harness all in good condition. J. W. Ham aker. From the Klamath News Mar 27. 1933 Tulelake children presented a pageant, "The Spirit of Tule Lake," at the Legion hall at Tulelake this week. It told the story of the Modoc war. Mrs. Helen Davis directed the pag eant. About 180 members of the Elks attended a joint meeting with ex-service men last night. Several were present from Lakevlew. There are nine owned herds of buffalo in the United States. Roaring river, Missouri, Is fed by a spring flow of 20,000,000 gallons daily, :.. Edsel Ford Dies At Detroit Home (Continued From Page One) from numerous and far-advanced ulcers of the stomach. Dr. Ros coe R. Graham, of the surgical faculty of the University of Tor onto, operated upon him and so far as possible removed the ulcer ous condition. Two weeks and three days after the operation Edsel Ford was back at his desk, working from 12 to 16 hours a day in an industry now totally converted to war. Whether he knew that he might expect a recurrence of the malady is not known; if he did he kept it from most if not all of his associates. A human being consumes a daily average of 10 milligrams of manganese. V Loggers in Uniform . . . A news story from Colorado cites a too-hand cowDoke who Was inducted into the army a year or so ago, and is now a cook in a Florida camp. A fuzz-faced tenderfoot has taken his place on the range and has deferment. He'll need at least two years to become half as good as the top hand who is serving as a green horn army cook. Worse, be cause of manpower shortage, he now has to take the place of a man and a half on the range. Multiply -that case by thousands, and' you have the big headache of beef production for the Unit ed Nations. Probably the Brmy cook cited can apply for discharge to return to cowpunching. But will he? Up in Canada thousands of ex perienced loggers are in the army. It was announced they would be furloughed for work in the woods, upon Individual application. Only a dozen ap plied. Men stick to that uniform, once in it. The Case of Sen Gerske . . . There's a name familiar to many of the woods and mills, in both pine and fir. Ben Gerske is stationed on some island in the South Seas war zone as a man of the fighting "Seabees" t h e navy's construction battalions. He writes graphically of his ex periences in a letter to the news paper of his old union. It is an expression of highest fighting morale, though a simple account of the little things of every day the weather, the scenery, wash ing clothes, experiences with mosquitoes and lesser beasts, and such-like. You have to go between the lines to get a grip on the dangers and hardships. There are thousands more of Ben Gerske's breed in our fight ing forces all over the world, our men of the woods, loggers in uni form. Some will never see the green peaks and slopes of the Douglas fir country again. One I could tell you about is a former logging superintendent who gave his country all he had to give on Guadalcanal, in a final surge of heroism that won a decoration. Well, there you are. In war, when a man gets into uniform, this is the common code: "Now that I'm in it, I'll go through with it to the end." Once In service, a man will seldom back out on his own book. Headache Cure ... The cure for this manpower headache lies somewhere in what is called psychology. The main thing is for every man to get on the war job he can best do, and then stick to it. Somehow the "see it through" morale of the man In uniform must be built up in the civilian war worker. One thing on this is sure we need more letters, more commun ication, between men in uniform like Ben Gerske and the war workers in the woods. His let ter concludes: "By the way, I see a lot of familiar trademarks on the lum ber we use. The other day we had a whole batch of Shevlin pine. Believe it or not, it almost made me homesick. But it did me a lot of good to sec the lum ber from the plant in Bend, way down here in the South Seas, where every foot of it is being used to beat the Japs. I am sure that if the men at home could realize how wonderful it is to have floors in the tents in this country, for the service men, production at home would In crease over-night, and I don't mean Just 'maybe'." The men In the woods and mills who are also "seeing it through" are individually pro ducing their limit. Increased production will come with vol untary return of experienced log gers and lumbermen to the woods, in the program of the War Manpower Commission, and then their sticking to it as the men in uniform stick. Telling The Editor Lofton prfctto horo mutt not bo moro thin IM word Mi lomtn, muot bo srlt ion louNj on ONS SIOS ol tho pooor only, one) iauoi bo olrw. Contilbuttono foMoojboj thooo nMoo, oro owoify ofc HANDWRITINO ON THE WALL (Salem Capital Journal) A foretaste of what may be ex pected throughout most of Ore gon when . the "barber bill enacted by the last legislature and signed by Governor Snell goes into effect June 8, Is con. tained in an announcement by the Portlad barbers' union, that prices for tonsorial services will be increased June 1. un and after that date haircuts will be 75 cents lnstead-of 65 cents and shaves will be 50 cents. Chil dren' haircuts are marked up to 63 cents. For the present these prices will apply only to union shops. But when the new law goes Into effect the higher scale will be imposed by compulsion on the Independent barbers as well. That was the Intent and purpose of the bill lobbied through the legislature in its closing hours by high-pressure tactics. The act provides that when ever 70 per cent of the barbers in any county petition the state barber board, the board shall promulgate a scale of prices asked for by the petitioners and binding upon all shops and bar bers In that county. Thus In the case of Marion county, Salem's organized barbers, constituting more than 70 per cent of the bar bers in the county, will be able to dictate prices to be charged not only In this city but In Btl verton, Woodburn, Stayton, Jef ferson and every other town. There is serious question as to the constitutionality of the act, and It will probably be taken in to the courts for an early test. But while that Is pending there will likely be a revival in the lost art of home haircuttlng with soup bowl and shears, and wide expansion In the organiza tion of cooperative neighborhood barbering clubs. Barber shop shaves have been on the decline these many years in direct pro portion to boosts In prices. They are now due to experience a fur ther fade-out. Del Mar Race Track Turns To War Plant SAN DIEGO. Calif.. May 26 (P) Blng Crosby's Del Mar race track, which operated from 1637 to 1941. soon is to be turned Into an airplane parts manufacturing plant, Del Mar Turf club officials announced to day. Plans to convert the $1,000, 000 racing layout Into a feeder plant for a California airplane factory have been quietly formu lated and upon the arrival of the necessary machinery- and equipment the production will get underway soon. Fred PoggI, personal friend of Crosby's, said he has been named general man ager. The Del Mar Turf club, with Crosby as president, will run the manufacturing plant. Manatees are so sluggish that moss marine plants grow on their backs. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Page One) the Russian front would become a mere sideshow. Keep your fingers crossed on all rumors from Finland, which is under the nail thumb. 000 "THE Turks get into the rumor x picture today with the state ment that Germany Is putting tin bto on Rumania to stud another big army to Russia for a summer campaign. That tale Isn't unlikely. 000 A STATE of "uneasy calm" is reported today from tho Rus sian front. There's a lot of powder kegs scattered around there. Sooner or later, some body will toss a match. 000 TN Portland, Admiral Land, chairman of the U. S. mari time commission, says the ship builders are nosing out the sub marines. We're building ships now, he says, at the rate of 20 million tons a year, which Is faster than the U-boats can sink them. Ha adds that the conquest of Africa, which opened the Med iterranean sea route, was the equivalent of adding two or thrco million tons of shipping to what the allies already had. o o o DUT that down definitely on the favorable side. This is a war of ships. We can't get millions of men where they're needed without ships, and while most bombers and some fighters can be flown to where they're needed they will be comparatively useless without fuel, repair shops, and all the other supplies and facilities that planes must have If they are to KEEP flying. Anything that adds to our sup ply of ships brings nearer the hour of final victory. Wounded Local Man Comes Home From Tunisian Battles (Continued From Page One) ' tlon at Kasserlne pass, where his unit suffered heavy casualties and where he crawled for a mile on his stomach in the night when his group was virtually sur rounded. It was at Fondouk on April 6 that Atkinson was shot in the hand. The Americans there were driving a wedge Into the axis western front, and Atkinson was advancing with his group. The first rifle shot fired at these American caught him in the hand. The enemy In that sector, At kinson seys, was made up of Ger mans, and he is sure It was a German bullet that hit him. He dressed the wound himself and received expert medical atten tion back of the lines later on. He went to a port city and came back to New York on a hospital ship on wound leave. He will go soon to Texas for further treatment of the wound ed hand. The Klamath man likes the In fantry, after seeing a lot of hot action in Tunisia. Atkinson Is visiting his father. Roy Atkinson, and will soon go to Lewiston, Idaho. The memory of the martyred village of Lidice forbids us ever to relax. in the struggle now be ing waged against the power of evil and darkness. Czech Presi dent Edward Benes. Han Norland Fire Insurance. Gallant General and Gracious Lady ff e- V V3-" 1 Smiling Gen. Bernard L. Montgomery accepts a bouquet of thnnks from the attractive daunhtcr of a leading clllxon of Souiie, Tunisia, after British Eighth Army llboratod that city from Naxlo. Land Thinks Shipbuilders Have Outpaced Sub Inroads PORTLAND, Ore., May 26 (VP) Admiral Kniory S. Lhnd, who considers launching the ull-tlma No. 1 sport, thinks shipbuilders have outdone the submarine Launchlngs will stay ahead of sinkings from now on, the marl time commission chairman told reporters here, adding, "It may bo a dangerous thing to sny, but I believe It." Land, touring the west coast shipyards, will take his third launching in 24 hour today, that of the H. M. S. Atheling. another In a series of vest-pocket type aircroft escort carriers from Henry Kaiser's Vancouver yard, Within minutes after alighting from a plane here he had viewed two launchlngs. At Kaiser's Swan Island yard he got down on the floor to peer between legs of photographors and radio men to watch burners cut the plote that held the tank er River Raisin. He raised up just in time to be showered by champagne from the christening, brushed off the TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR THE BETTER grides of fuel oils, accurate, metered de liveries, try Fred H. Heilbron ner, 821 Spring street, tele phone 4153, Distributor Shell Heating Oils. 6-13m WANTED Used hand garden cultivator with accessory at tachments. Phone 5306 eve nings. 5-28 FOR SALE Hammond Solovox. Have pipe organ effects in your home. Also Stcgen Grand piano, excellent condition. Shepherd Music Co., 345 E. Main street. Dial 7133. 5-28 foam and grinned, "I'll never tire of launchlngs. They're tho most thrilling thing I know of." Land also told reporters ship production now was on a sched ule of 20,000,000 tons annually, and said the North African vic tory meant a gain of 2.000,000 or 3,000,000 tons of shipping for the United Nations. History teaches that treaties of peace stipulated In a spirit mid with conditions opposed bothMo tho dictates of morality and to genuine political wisdom have had but a wretched and shortlived existence. Pope Pl us XII. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY PALMER WANTS TO BUY 5 CARLOADS USED FURNITURE For Shipment to Portlond Will Pay Top Cash Prices for 200 Beds complete 200 Circulators and heaters 200 Iceboxes (old style) 200 Electric Ranges 200 Washing Machine 200 Hot Plates and Iron 100 Bedroom Suites 100 Dinette Sets 100 Davenport Suite 100 Electric Refrigerator Clean out your garage and basement NOW while Used Mer chandise Is In demand. PALMER'S BARGAIN HOUSE 2401 So. 6th St. Phone 84SS 6-1 AN INTERSTATE BUSINESS COLLEGE summer business course will put you In line for a good job. Enroll In new classes tills week, 432 Main. 5-26 MODERN 3 - ROOM furnished house. 2552 Shasta way. 6-28 FOR RENT Furnished duplox. 3 rooms and bath. Couple pre ferred. $20 per month. 2050 White Ave. Phono 3588. 5-26 fc7or.M;ifltij 3 DAYS ONLY Thursday - Friday - Saturday HAT SALE Sale of 225 Spring Hats Values up to $7.95 All Colors $3 i 1