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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1943)
I' OR FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON June 10, 1043 Alimbrr of Tm Ax3at Ptm Tht Awirtttf4 prr M ItHr rntdlnt to th ow of ' uMn-fttK. M dlipttetw CTT'Hirt lo I' or But othnit f4-tt ! ttit-pir. a- -1o tht Wl mrwt pwMt.b lhfrt. Ait rtiht rrpgbltcttkia of rectal tttip-tf' art 1m r- FRANK JENKINS A tMpof 7 CMBbltattoa of th hwtatiif TtrraM i-4 t-tb Kva. faMitrtH IWT ftrs.oa ex pi -47 8plMit M4 PtM tmU. KUm-tli Tlt Orto. by Ui NrraM Clklf Oa a4 lh Kluuth Vrw fafeJkshtai Con pan Klf4 a mcaM tr tl 1tt Mtrfta ml Klvra.U rv Or a A -mat t. iwt ader ct cl Bcuav Or CacvufKur KprMMt4 KttteMlty ft? Wtvr-HocxmiT Cv, lira lu fructoea. Xe Tort. S- A-fl MALCOLM KPI.EY SIDE GLANCES 1 ! EPLEY Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY FAVORABLE new! about aviation develop ment here, forecast some time afo in thu column, developed the other day when CAA oflicials came to town. They disclosed that ., ; important improvement in- ? ,'! ' ' eluding runway extension, are i in immediate prospect for the Klamath field, and bids on this construction have actually I I J C.-? Because an airport is a mili tary installation in inese times, details of the improve ments have not been public ized. But it is reassuring to know that the field here is a "live" project on the govern ment list. Incidentally, it is also pleasing to note on the local scene again the face of Captain O. E. Schroeder, army engineer who had charge of the major construction, work done here last year. - Klamath must keep plugging for its rightful place in the aviation picture of the future. That it has such a place is definitely indicated by the official interest in field development here. That some time in the future near or far regular airline service will come through here seems a foregone conclusion. In this con - nection. development of a field somewhere in the northern part of the county Beaver marsh " has been mentioned is essential for emergency landing purposes. Some time ago the wires carried news from Washington that Beaver marsh, was on the list for construction. Later, it was dropped. CAA officials said they understood Klamath county had been unwilling to ' sponsor the project, and that some, such; public body was needed for sponsor. -V-'r-. . This was news to the Klamath, county court. Court members said they had never been in formed the couqty was needed as sponsor, and declared further that the .county is ready to cooperate in any reasonable way in such a program. . . ' The county owns a lot of land in the north ern area. It could probably trad for an air port site if it does not own land which could be used for that purpose. This writer has been before the court a num-, ber of times ' in connection with aviation mat-' ten, and has found the members cooperative j and air-minded. We believe its help in aviation development can be counted on. We'll be doubly sure of that when the Summers lane : extension to the airport is improved as ex pected in the near future. No Pix of Cattalo The reason you haven't seen picture of Chet Barton's cattalo in the paper is that it fell to this scribe to try to get the shot We found, in the course of a busy afternoon at Chefs place in Poe valley, that Epley isn't much of a photographer, and that a cattalo is not ideal as a photographic subject. .' The cattalo, as you probably know, is the ' offspring of an Angus bull and a buffalo cow. ' We didn't meet the father, but the cow was very much in evidence on the occasion of our visit ' She placed her huge bulk between us and the little cattalo and kept it there through most of the afternoon while we moved around in the pasture desperately snapping the shutter every time the little black animal could be seen through the range-finder. Result No picture. There was also a bull buffalo in the pasture who contributed to our failure. He eyed us malevolently every time we got a few. feet from the light car we used for traversing the long distances in the pasture. Usually, this eyeing drove us back into the safety of the t I 5l ISl i6 I J 00. tU aTY Hi aa-VCT m T. ira u at r am 1 Transportation News L ms tf mA lm - t. m ra u ft t am "That's just it Bill puts all women on a pedestal! He'd be as easy for some foreign dnme to catch as he was for me!" IE a hurry. The paper Is stained. Seaman Glass was born In Columbus, O., the son of Mr. 'and Mrs. Hiram Clark, and came to Battle Creek when he was four years old. Shortly aft erward his mother died and he BATTLE CREEK. Mich . .Turn, was adopted by Mrs. Glass. flivver's interior. That sort of thing oidn, ! " 00 s 1 S. P. Will Hold War Service Day With the 12,000th star Just added to Southern Pacific's serv ice flag, designation of Tuesday. June IS, as " S. P. War Service Day" In honor of former em ployes in the armed forces was announced today by A. T. Mcr cler, president of the company. In a message to the railroad's 80,000 men and women regard ing the special event, President Mercier said: "Let us pledge anew our full est support to the fighting serv ices by making each job each day count to the utmost; by be ing alert and safe; by promoting teamwork with a spirit of help fulness to all railroad patrons' by writing to fellow workers in the armed forces, and by buying War Bonds, contributing to war relief agencies and donating to blood banks." Aristotle thought the brain was a great spongo through which the blood passed to be cooled. Delaware has 3894 miles of highways. bled by a Battle Creek boy who until hrtly before Christmas was reported lost on an Ameri can submarine more than a year From what we saw of the cattalo at a dis tance, it is a black animal, about the size of a a..u rat-oiDiing a sau in most par-! ago, has produced one of the ticulars. Its head is somewhat larger, and the I war's strongest stories, shoulders give an imoression of ntnui ti.. ..i. ...i.:.. 1.. 4. and strength definitely reminiscent of its buf-II'm still thinking of you. Law. i sumcdtobelost. iaio ioreoears. e hope to try again for a rence Glass, Elcclric avenue, picture with a more able photographer handling B. C., Mich.." has reached" Law the Speed-Graphic and with the ma buffalo renc' foster-mother. Mrs. H. and that evil bull out of the pasture. Glass of Battle Creek. One benefit from our experience: we're golna t Tne note WB 'ountl in San : - . : FrnnMcf-A Kav hv Dmor A Ton. ujujr mure man ever tnose buffalo steaks I , . ' '. at Vallejo, Calif. in 1941. In March, 1942, the navy disclosed that the subma rine Shark, on which Glass was serving, was more than a month overdue, and "m u s t be pre- Bcfore It can rise from the ground, an albatross must make a run of 60 to 90 fttft into the wind. , we've been saving in the ice box. BL:m J 4 La Mam,- pressed and something like a WaU Street ogre itCFrS UtSflinU ITCIT5 o various forms and shapes, was an economic power in tne land. Management Crushed ' k i AJ AGEMENT is crushed today. Only. one IYI By PAUL MALLON ' . WASHINGTON, June 10 Dear Mr. Brad street Hyatt, Meriden, Connecticut I thought you presented the orthodox liberal position very well, although you do not profess j to speak for Mr. Bruce Bliven Classified Ads Bring Results. mm- MALLON ness. theory that only one side can enjoy freedom in the conflict between the workers and the employer, for instance. The alternatives, as you see them, are that the employer be free to exploit the individual work er or the individual worker be free to' exploit the busi- ' Indiana's Llmberlost swamp He sent the ! was named for "Limber Jim," a note to Mrs. Glass, who said to- hunter who once became lost for day she is certain the note was . days in tne swampy area. written by her foster son be cause "It was in his handwrit ing. Besides, he referred to me as Mom, and nobody else knew he called me that." Written on a small piece of paper, evidently a sheet torn from a small memo pad, the note was scribbled unevenly across the paper, indicating it must have been Jotted down in class and group has accumulated wealth out of this war the labor union rn.ni rj or the new republic in your made It that way. ' lkiuzt tu me. i .. 0ny the umons ree of confiscatory .warume taxes which have and will continu. tn prevent any other group from acquiring wealth. You liberals forced the new millions of war workers into unions and the payment of tax- free dues, which comprise the only wealth j BUY WAR BOND secret from the inspection of anyone, even the I government H V WAD ROKJniS BUY Vf'AR BONDS It's Not Liberal THAT is the trouble with all liberal thought in this country and the reason why it is ' not liberal.. True liberalism and true democ racy says no group should be at liberty to exploit another group. No one knows, therefore, how much wealth the unions have amassed out of this war, but they are buying up property here, building big office "buildings, even ironically lending money to Evalyn MacLean, the ex-millionairess, to build a bus terminal; and buying the build ing which the republican national committee could not afford to buy. They are the bankers now, even for presi dential candidates. They have the new power of wealth, the only remaining power of wealth. in iroa system, the average man has about The corporation should not be free to exploit as much freedom a, a mine worker in the the individual, or the unions tree to exploit , Lewis union who might want to do his patriotic the corporation. You ignore the great bulk of duty and return to work Your liberalism thus has raised by enslave ment the man who works with his hands above the Independent man who works with his brairi. You have spurned intellectual suc cess to embrace manual uniformity. Bricklayers earn more than school teachers and occupy a position of more civil power in your scheme of life under their union head. assiduously than the rights of business, knowing You contro1. courts and make hi-Jacking legal that both these rights are. inferior to the for unions , only . but 8 crime for every other common rights of all. - w To find where your liberalism . leads you. teamsters probably earn more than the writ- us the consumers who pay the bills, The duty of true liberal government is to defend the average the greater good" for the greater numbers. ; Its interest is solely the interest of the average man. Its norm is the average. of all freedoms of all classes and people. It safeguards the rights of labor no, more follow it to its logical conclusion and your ultimate victory. -Crown it with success. You've Seen It ers for your liberal magazine the New Re public, certainly, scrub women, earn as much working for the government in Washington as some white collar clerks. . Your liberalism, which professes a devotion YOU then have such things as John L. Lewis to learning, truthful art and Independent thinli. standing above the common good, actually mBl worships the man who cannot read, write ur uiuuc, ana manes him your norm. able to conduct a devastating strike in wartime without punishment or any retribution whatever- He is able to ruin the price-wage policy of liberal labor government for the immediate ends of the worker not their ultimate good, for Inflation will destroy them as well as us all. '-.."" Lewis has no other interest than to keep coal miners pleased and paying dues, no re- sponsiDimy to the government or the people, Confiscate Success YOU have made the noble professions ess profitable and less desirable for coming gen erations. You want to confiscate success in all lines in favor of a union norm, even reducing medicine to a wholesale government business. The taxes you advocate put a penalty on trie teacher, artist, inventor, doctor, lawyer, writer only the responsibility to get his men ever who struggles' through 20 years of preparation higher and higher pay and privileees. So also with all 'union leaders. All men know these obvious truths, but no one dares speak them. Certainly no politician or Washington statesman does, because of fear of the political power that the naturally selfish (like the rest of us) union leader has amassed. Even the president of the United States in his dealings with Lewis obviously has not felt himself free of this pressure. You should not be surprised to hear me say your view is reactionary, -and illiberal. It was good liberalism back in the days Of the elder LaFollctto when unions Were weak and op to attain a great success. What thinker in this country has the power or actual prestige of Jonn L,. Lewis or the local political bosses? The consequences of your' liberalism are- an end of democracy and a strong-armed quasi dictatorship under a democratic, name, which can be run only by one of two classes. If ' the conservatives can get control 6f it they will crush you. As long as you are in control, you will crush everyone else.. Indeed, this Is what you proclaim to be your aim. Do you call that liberalism? Or freedom? Or democracy? I call It reactlonarism, despotism, ana totalitarianism. Rings of the planet Saturn are built and successfully operated usually visit only one kind of made up of tiny moons, neld in the first gasoline car in America, flower on each trio place by gravitation. in 1892. Charles and Frank .Siiijfm. When gathering nectar, bees in'san " BUY WAR BOND BUY WAR BO BUY WAR BO BUY WAR BO BUY WAR B BUY WAR BCII BUY WAR BQ BUY WAR BC BUY WAR BC BUY WAR BO BUY WAR BO BUY WAR BO 1 11 11 .. 1 1 Zl II 11 1 . 1 L-Toi CATSUP BUY WAR BONDS Y WAR BONDS Y WAR BONDS Y WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS WAR BONDS fm crazy about these QUI CM HOME-BAKED BEANS! end took been overnight. Simmer beons In salted water on lop of stove until tender. Add molasses or brown sugar. Pour beam and liquid Into shallow pan. Season with C-H-B Tomato Cotiup. Add slice of salt pork If available. Brown In oven about 75 minutes Instead of the usual long period. X I LM H I 1 &-- aft Raymond Dairy Phone 3179 For Milk and Dairy Products WE MAKE RETAIL DELIVERIES U. S. Bombers Hit Indo-China Town CHUNGKING, June 10 (A1) American bombers attacked Hongny, 30 miles northeast, of Haiphong In French Indo-Chlna yesterday, heavily damaglnx coaling docks, warehouses, rail road yards and power transmis sion lines, a communique from Lieut. Gen. Joseph W. Stllwcll's headquartors announced today. Dense clouds of sinoko rising to 9000 feet and visible 30 -miles away mnrked the target area aft er the raiders passed. The twin-engined Mitchells and Warhawks which made the raid encountered no enemy in terception, tho communique said, and all returned to their bases. (The Tokyo radio in a Hanoi dispatch yesterday said the Burke to Lead Fight for Bill PORTLAND, Juno 10 (P)-Q Stoto Senator W. E. Durko must ered forces today for a refer endum election fiuht In support of hla bill to limit the sale of fortified wines to suite liquor stores, Tho Sherwood senntor mid ho would cull a meeting soon of the supporters of his bill, which was prevented from going Into effect next January 1 by an Orujiim wlno council petition henrlng enouith signatures to require a referendum. The petition, sluned by moro than 10,000 voters, was filed Tuesday. northern Imlo-Chlna rciilon hnd been bomhod, but asserted dam age was negligible.) I VE FOUND IT! The spoonful Of Fitness"... that's fun to eat! U Grade I Milk I Bit ::at Si mm 1 ftndt frTmuV. ..eiti-w'".... .UH.IMSHIW-- LOW POINT NUTRITION SPECIALS pIL Tomato Juice 48i:..n24c P. Blended Juice i Tomato Juice 11c Royal Club. No. 300 Tin c Milk . 2. . 28c Libby's No. 1 Tall Can for r' "w"" v" w P Grape Juice fEZ 32c JSSL 3c.n.32c 2 n-MRMA "eco lO 8 A r'.t 17- (J PU. Mirac No, 2 Tin " p. TI3Un VSII p. Bo(,i b r Grapefruit Juice iTl r!"b ' 10c Pts. Pts. New Potatoes . New Potatoes Shatter No. 1 Grapefruit Bunklit. Large Sise .....,. Sunkist Lemons Am. 'Lbs. Shafter-WhltM. Small 81... Lb. 1 Old Potatoes . 5 45C KUm'h Ntted Gems, No. 1. Lb C Oranges rev sunkiu 11, Md. Sise for Juice Doi. OJC Dosen Drifted Snow $2.09 Sugar 63c 5-Lb. Bag 33 Pts. 7 Pts. 6 Pts. 8 Pts. Pork Roast ;n'dn"nLb. 33c Pork Steak SuJte Side PorkLunBrdLb.29c Beef Roast M Young Tender Steer Lb.wc p. Short Ribsof B..f Extra Lean. Lb. 31c 8 Pts, Lamb Roast Grade A Shoulder. Lb. 32c Lunch Meats Aorl.d Lb. 39c SWAN SOAP 8c CAMAY SOAP 3 .a. 20c 0XYD0L 23c RIHS0 23c ( 8) Asparagus, Royal Club, all green. picnic tin 21 (11) Royal Club Spinach, No. 2 tin IS (14) Lane County Beans, No, 2 tin 15 (18) Meco Peas, No. 2 tin 13 (18) Wadham'a Peas, fancy. No. 2 tin 15 (11) Royal Club Tomatoes, tail tin 11 (14) Royal Club Corn, Ne, 2 tin 14 (12) Del Mont. Corn, 12-oa. tin 14 (10) Royal Club Sliced Beets, No. 2 tin 13 (21) Peaches. Royal Club, No. 2 4 tin 2g (13) Medford Pears, No. 2M tin 28 (15) Libby's Fruit Cocktail, No. I tall tin 16 (10) Catsup, CHB, large botil. is Tru Pak Okra, No. 2 tin 17 Corn, Nunso Tender, dehydrated, 4M oi. P1 13 Vinegar, CHB, quart bottle . 15 Shredded Wheat, reg, sis. pkg. .............. H Peanut Butter, Jane Goode, 2-lb. Jar SB Certo 3 bottles for 45 Hi-Ho Crackers, large pkg 20S Matches, Searchlight, carton 27 Sperry's Pancake Flour, 9.81b. bag 81 SNOWDRIFT 68c iu II folnll SC0TTISUE 3 n.ii, 23c SCOT TOWELS 2 romi 1 9c WALG0RF TISSUE 4 Rollt I9c y