PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
nun nmm
aiior
MALCOLM CPU
l&anaslns Editor
St. . . M.ara PtthltfthMt afternoon ttrCCDt SUadlT
at CeBlanade and Pine etreeta. Klamath Falla. OreaTon. by tha
Imai Publlahlna Co. and IbtNiwi Publishing company.
B aarrler .
SUBSCRIPTION RATI .
.month TSe By mall .
montha s.as
By carrier r" $7 50 By mail . yr o i,i
Oalalda Klamath, Lake. Modoo. Blakiyou countea year STOP
vaamd aa aacond claaa mattar at tha poatofflca of Klamath
faUaTOra. oa Auaust 90. 1008. undar act ol congrees.
i
March, a. lrre
' Mam bar.
jAaaaclatad Praaa
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
today's Roundup
Bf MALCOLM EPLEV .
NEXT special levy vote slated here, for pre
financing of post-war construction and re
habilitation will be held Monday. At that time
patrons of the Klamath Union
high school district will de
termine the fate of a proposed
levy to raise $60,000 a year
for five years for this pur
pose. . KUHS district is in a pe
culiarly satisfactory situation!
in that this levy will not actu
ally increase district taxes
dver their present levels. That
it because the district's bond
ed debt is now reaching its
final stages, and it will no EPLET '
longer be necessary to levy $60,000 a year for
bonded debt By maintaining the taxation
for that amount for another .five years, the
, district can build a tidy reserve.
It is pleasant, after paying an old debt for
many years, to reach the place where money
can be laid away for future needs.
a a
Needs Outlined
WE have asked Superintendent Arnold Gra
lapp of the school system here to outline
for us the principal needs which will be met
by the money which this levy, if passed, will
raise.
His answer, summed up, was that the major
projects ahead are:
X. Vocational training expansion, meeting
practical educational needs in an industrialized
and agricultural community.
3. Development and changes in the physical
education, plant, especially in the Modoc field
area.
3. Building changes or construction that will
bring about a satisfactory auditorium for both
school and community use. (The present audi
torium cannot accommodate the entire student
body at one time.) ' '
4. -Revamping and modernization of the light
ing system at the high school plant.
5. Installation of an adequate Intercommuni
cation and public address system.
;
Sound Scheme
THESE are projects which will undoubtedly
I come up in the operation and development
of the fine, secondary educational system here,
regardless of the adoption of the special levy
Monday. Their pre-f inancing by the levy
method, is in keeping with the general trend
iri Oregon and here, as as indicated in this
week's voting in a number of districts.
iThe $60,000 five-year levy was approved by
th budget committee and the school board,
and was endorsed, by the chamber of com
merce directors.
Clark, of Idaho, although they ar lew worried
about CIO.
These are th real reasons for tha long
recess.
Criticism no doubt will now pour down upon
these furrowed legislative brows because they
are abandoning the urgency of peacetime re
conversion planning. The criticism will be
superficially valid, because they are leaving
behind at least one reconversion bill, although
the truth is the bill could not . be passed it
they stayed. Too much controversy envelops it.
a a a a
Urgent Need
THE urgent need of soma more mrecnve
action is increasing dally. The problem Is
here now though the solution is still absent. All
tabs on business show the peak of production
and employment was passed six months ago
and declines averaging about 3 per cent are
evident in all lines.
True, a happier outlook for post-war at home
is beginning to be evident behind the news.
The stock market always, until now, has sighed
and sagged at the prospects of victory. The
final grand assault, however, sent it firmly up.
Even the old arch-pessimist Joseph P. Ken
nedy, business seer extraordinary, made a
speech in Chicago holding out hopes he former
ly disdained.
The problem is simple. There is $300,000,
000,000 of cash in banks and savings bonds.
People ar short of everything and can us
this money to buy.
To sustain a satisfactory and successful na
tion we must have a national income for th
people IB to 35 per cent below current war
expenditures.
a a a
Facts Must Dovetail
THE solution must dovetail these tacts Into
each other and provide a practical economic
program for the next few years, which will not
only do the job, but inspire confidence, now
that it can be done.
The - administration has put forward a pro
gram which has not yet convinced any on
th job will be don. At th top of its setup
is Mr. Byrnes in the office of demobilisation,
but that office is only a itw desks and tele
phones. Actually Byrnes, without any economic staff
(unless you can call Ben Cohen, the laywer, an
economist) is a peacemaker over the various
conflicting government agencies.
Apparently C. E. Wilson was to take over th
actual plant reconversion program, but he no
sooner settled himself in that seat, than Mr.
Donald Nelson announced a reconversion pro
gram (at the instance of the Truman committee,
so they say). To make the confused state of
affairs even more clearly discernible the army
denounced the Nelson program '
a a a a
Bill of Rights
THE GJ. bill of rights has been passed allow
ing up to 52 weeks within two years of
unemployment compensation at $20 a week,
so that veterans could lay around for that
length of time, although, of course, the prob
lem is to get 'people back to work.
Only if the nation is working and producing
can it hope to survive, because, after all the
talk about gold, inflation, wage-hours, etc.,
work is the only constructive economic factor
which can generate a successful country..
Other details are being handled separately,
Vinson preparing a price program, Marvin
Jones, the farm machinery, Will Clayton the
surplus property disposal, etc.,-but yet no one
is handling the problem as a whole.
The primary necessity to keep things going
SIDE GLANCES
iVOUC Rahinrl 4 ha Mausc fa "visUm, and while Senate Finance Chair
nctTd UCIIUIU tfC IYeVr5 man George promises early action,,it is appar-
WASHINGTON, June 22 The planned va
cation of congress is ostensibly 'to enable
the republicans and democrats to attend their
respective conventions. But
the private understanding is
that not much business will
be attempted before August 1.
lit seems the house mem
bers have been worried by the
undetected inner political ac
tivities of the Hillman - CIO
group and insist on getting
back home, not only for fence
mending, but to find who has
been digging holes under their
fences.
: Senators also have been up- MALLOW
set by the defeats of Holman, of Oregon, . and
v-. (-
ent that matter is not being handled in co
herence with the whole. .
Yet complete coherence is essential, even to
the manpower problem of McNutt who has done
no post-war work I have heard of. ' Someone is
needed to plan the gradual release of men
from the army with the gradual acceleration of
peacetime business (this should be started now
to take up the already noticeable 3 per cent
slack.)
What the job needs is a top. It already has
too many bottoms. The coordinator could be
Mr. Byrnes, if he has not too much else to do
trying to keep peace, but a better choice would
be an economically conscious-organizer like
Baruch or Kennedy, or someone of that type
who could not only draw these loose ends to
gether but keep them balanced with economic
necessities through the post-war years.
BEARDWOOD TELLS
PUBIN
'SEATTLE, June 22 UP) Can-
tain Jack Beard wood, former
Tacoma and Seattle Associated
Press editor who himself wears
the Silver Star for gallantry, re
turned home yesterday with the
firmly expressed opinion that
"Every damn soldier in Italy
cugni to nave a meaai.
IBeardwood, a former aide to
Li Gen. Mark Clark, telling' of
me tougnness ot tne Italian cam-
fialgn, asserted he did not be
ieve Americans really knew
how mountainous the Italian bat
tlefronts are.
He added that the third di
vision "which is full of Pacific
northwest men, has been really
terrific."
'Captain Beardwood said he
won nis medal for being "in the
wrong place at the right time."
His citation shows that at
Ealerno he went 700 yards under
direct fire from four German
tanks to put his radio set at
" commana of a detachment
which had been cut off from
other sources and had been un
able to direct artillery support.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
Scouts Average
$1000 Per Day
In Bond Canvass
Scouts of Klamath Falls aver
aged more than $1000 per day in
their house-to-house sale of "E"
bonds on Tuesday and Wednes
day of this week. They are 'out
again today and are planning to
visit every house in town. One
scout reported the sale of a $500
bond, but most of them were
more modest with three $100
bonds, one $200 bond and the re
mainder of the $29 and $50 var
iety. . . t .. , .....
These boys are out after, "ex
tra" bonds and are not interested
in credit for a bond that vou nl.
ready planned to purchase some-
wnere else. "U you're already
buying to the hilt, dig a little
deeper and get an extra one from
Men, Women! Old or
Young! Need Pep?
Want New Vim and Vitality?
jwmct of , a) h, a) fM
raw armt atawel. wc t. m ato. ua. XT. car V
Duddy, I've founda"vondcrrul Hailing spot where wc
Con.spendjjurjVncnlion right neiir nn Arniyuir force
' training camp, loo I'V
E
SEATTLE, June 22 OP)
Wreckage of a navy bomber
which disappeared with six men
on a flight from the Whidby
Island air station 'base lost De
cember 26 has been found near
Lawn Point, Vancouver Island,
a. i;., me urn naval district an
nounced today.
A Royal Canadian air force
plane sighted the wreckage last
Saturday. The bodies of live men
were found.
They were: Lieut. Joseph R.
Cranny, USNR, pilot, father
Timothy T. Cranny. 1126 Sum
mer St., Grlnnell, la.; Ensign
Charles H. Schoenfelder, USN.
R., father, Frank Schoenfelder,
Wathena, Kan.; Aviation Radio
man 3c Robert L. Maguet, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John Maguet,
1827 Baird Ave., Portsmouth,
Ohio; Aviation Ordnanceman
3c Joseph I. Winslow, Jr.,
mother, Mrs. Joseph I. Winslow,
5291 Forbes St., Pittsburgh. Pa.;
and Aviation Machinists' Mate
2c Ernest L. Morgan, father,
narjes jx. morgan, KOCKvme,
Va.
The name of the sixth man,
still listed as missing, was not
announced.
Oregon Farms Need
More Family Groups
CORVALUS, June 22 UP)
More family-size groups of har
vest workers, who drive their
own cars out to the fields, are
needed on Oregon farms, the
emergency farm labor office said
today.
Groups of one or two women
and three or four youngsters can
readily be used by small growers
and shifted from one harvest job
to anomer, we ottice said.
Total number of stars has
been estimated at between 30,
000 and 50,000 millions.
Don't Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
a scout," Scout directors urged.
Scouts will continue to can
vass the 'city for the next seven
days and will make at least three
call backs at every house if they
find no one at home the first call.
T 1- . 1 I.
n Ki 4 . no inur tuu or feellnc. Git TASTEETH today
Call 6018 and a SCOUt will call. I at any dru stora.
Do falsa teeth Hrtm .1 In nr whM,
when you talk, aat, laugh or aneeca?
Don't ba annoved and -m H rr. hv
such handicap!. FASTEETH. an alkallaa
inon-aeiai powaer to iprliutle on your
platee, keeps falsa taath more firmly sat
Gives confident feellna of security and
added comfort. No rummy, fooey, pasty
Germany May Offer
Surrender, Says
Morgenthau
NEW YORK, June 32 VP)
Secretary of the Treasury Henry
Morgenthau, Jr., said today that
Germany probably would offer
"a semblance of surrender" bo
for its armies were destroyed
and before Germany Itself had
been invaded.
Declaring that "If we yield lo
such blandishments, we shnll
have lost this war," Morgenthau
told 1400 persons at a luncheon
in celebration of the dedication
of Fifth avenuo as "the avenue
of the allies" during the Fifth
War Loan drive that the sur
render offer probably would be
coupled with an overthrow of
Hitler and "his gangster govern
ment." "No doubt there will be pro
testations of democracy, no
doubt we shall all be told that
we need a strong Germany to
protect one United Nation against
another," he continued. .
Hitler's "real secret weapon"
is the weapon of division, Mor
genthau said. "As disaster con
fonts him, he will use that
weapon cunningly."
To Journeymen
in all crafts
Maybe you're a Machinist. Boll
ermaker. Carpenter, Electrician,
or Pipefitter, Okeh you're
the man we're looking for. But
first, we want to offer you
something so you'll be looking
for ui. Well, what do we offer?
Good wages (we've reeentlv
upped them considerably). That
certain reeling you get when
you're a railroader with S.P.
working in perhaps . the most
exciting, most Interesting he
man's work there Is. Working
with friendly, saltof-the-earth
people. Yes, and with a perms
nanr sintlt A 4K with e T
you'll find, offers a good deal
more than a good pay-check.
It's something you can put your
nean into, do proud ot. You 11
get rauroaa pass privileges,
real pension man. Medical aei
Ices. Everything that makes an
H.r job a bit better than most.
Come in and have a talk with
us. You can't lose by it, and
you certainly stand to gain.
See or writ Trainmaster S. P.
Station, Xlamath Falls, or s
your ntarast S. P. Agank .
rfUm!
sua oow eaia Sc. Gd
i't,"". ererywhere In Klamath
-" wniiman, tvalffreea Draff.
to eutrt escort oeflrfney
rf-A Gem of Thought From Idella's i
There was a young fellow named Bunn
Who went to his lawyer on th run;
He cried, "Annul my divorce as quick as you can.
. I got the low-down on mr wife's old man
He had NO lictnss to carry thai gunl"
Headache Pills . . .
AT IDELLA'S
f What a Qal!
25c
4S4S 8, Ml
Phone S4S
: F.R.E El
3 New Rose Dawn Plants
If you'll send 25 cents for postage and handling.
To advertise our unique method of selling direct from nursery to yeu
through the mail, we'll send you three well rooted Rose Dawn perennial
flower plants, ready to set out In your yard. These are the new flowers you
have been hearing about through radio stations and the garden magazines
of the country. They grow two to three feet high and bear loads of silver
pink flowers from April to August. Fine for cutting or for yard decoration.
Ideal planting time now,
' We 'want you to have three of these plants to transplant In your yard, so
you can see what strong healthy flowers we raise. Formerly priced In our
catalog ot 30 cents per plant. Now you1 moy have three selected two-year-old
specimens for the cost of postage and handling, 25 cents.
Offer good during brief shipping period only. Send your request, inclosing
. 25 cents, to
CLARK GARDNER
4 , WESTERN OFFICE
711 AnArtcan luilding ' Seattle, 4, Wasli.
TICKETS AVAILABLE
Tickets to the Fourth of July
rodao are now on sale at th
Klamath Durknroo hr(ulquirt'r
123 South Fifth. O. D. Mat
thaws. Dresidcnl of Ilia roiioo
association said Thursday that
many orders havo already boon
taken.
With the Fourth of July only
11 days away, plans are under.
way lor tha big runmuin imick
nroo dnys pnrada to bo hold on
innt any. An invitation is is
sued to all bualnesj houses.
various oraunliatlons and the
military forces hero to partici
pate, either wild floats or march
Ins In the Dumde.
The Klamath Ducknroo days
nrUe list hns been okayed by the
cowboy s rurue associat on and
the contract for furnishing stock
for the show has been awarded
to Max Barbour, Matthews announced.
Pennsylvania's Carman Amer
icans prefer the uiiabhiiannlg-
kcttserklaeruiiK to anything Hit-
ler could offer thorn, Hep. Iloch
(D-Pn.) told the iM-oDlo of luui
Germany In an office, of war In
formation oversea broadcast.
u n anhaonaiiikeirncrk Inertinc
Is German for declaration ot In-
dependence.
The coiutrcumnn. ancuklna In
German, said Pennsylvania was
the state where tha Declaration
of Independence was signed and
aaaeo:
"Those who know freedom as
long as we do. hnte dlctatonihln."
Hoch's "Pennsylvania Dutch"
is li-.imt out his nlch German
needed brushlna ud before the
oroaacasi.
"I certainly had to practice on
u n a b haeniriekelUterklaoruiitf."
ho said. "Gully, what a tongue
twister." -'erfsl
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS ACIDS
Hlp 18 MIIm of K!dny Tub
Fluavh Out PoUonoui WuU
If rotj bar u mnm of mUU la yourblooaj,
yotxt 1A mile of kklrvay ttibca my be) ow
workwd. Thee liny Mure svt! tube ar work
Um day tod &tbt to beio Nnu rid ytr
tmUa of nr twltt tod pctrnwum (,
Wbfa diiordr of kWoy luosrUoa pmli
Mfaoaoua matter to rmfn In your Mood. It
Buy mum Muioa tjckK, r SemmAiia m
U paUs. t of pp ftM nrrjr. ((ait up
Kbta, Uinc. purBnawi uixUr thm tyw,
daM&M rl Ulllinewt, Kvumteol orsMAty
Pt tlb nUfUAtf ftfid bttfoifaej dMm
tltsw tnowt lbr U iwtteHbiof wraog wtib
your jwtoy or blkvliltr,
etsaoarjainajr newu nem gm mmm powm.
OMk youriininut for Doan'a lllie, uMdu
eeMiully by miliioM for ovr 40 rr, W
kit) happy rM uwl will blp Ih ft mQm of
Tollinil
The Editor
tallsn otlnltel he,a nwal nal ka mar
than too aiarea In leniih, nuat ta afll
Itn Isaikl, an 0NB ilak el the f
anly. and musl be HsnaS, tanirlamiani
laliaailna ihtM rules, are Mraal ral-
"JEBRY"
(In memory of Clyd Worely,
Jr., "Jerry" of the 88th squad
ron, USNAS, Klamath Falls,
oreson.j
Jerry wus th Rrandeat (uy
In every kind of way,
Ho always hud a smlla
Or a eliaery word to say.
Jerry wore his stiver wlnai
Like an eaele on th fly
And when his feet were on th
ground,
His heart was In the sky.
We can't tell how we miss him
Now that he's gone away
But maybe In another world.
We'll meet again someday.
1 1 K . i nt.UMi Ian frt. .Iau
Just the other day,
"Happy Go Lucky'' Jerry, we'll
rnmsmhsp von that uav.
Wo won't forget the things you
mild and all the things you
aia.
With tears In our eyes we'll
dr nk a toast
For a "Happy Landing, Kid."
Dolly Baker,
4320 Bartletl Ave.
Klamath Falls, Ore.
(7TryTU'Mlt,H4Ti
CCITIinr nr nL.
iwiunc ur b-zs
crTTh-aaw,.
vaung Uiat th. now 3,7 i?
r qu pned with nvi "fit
cabins and hoa l.,uP 'VW
which "trao U.e "rew'fr',!5"11'''
ng oxygen muka .pSJfJf
lh.m from subiero "old.R 'cU
An nnouncemnl by m.u
Ben Locke, public rIeiLM,r't
cr of the' army?n
mand at Boeing fioM !,.?
Uiat supercharger,
near normal air nreeiur. tt"
unusual degree of swndrSw,'"
and cabin heat Th.U?0dW"?
B crw on a ln,, nui.7 iJor l
mary advantage"' " '
r?,Caa"rj:!M11' Wlh Ulffi
-."i.uvw inu ajiow that In
tantaneou decompression. unH.;
these eonflllln,,. J t.Tu n.Hnlf
flight .re w thout WZ
human body." 10 m
Classified Ads Bring (luui.
Tower
and
Esquire
Starting
SUNDAY
LAMOUR W-t
SI
DOROTHY I
rprn v.i-iiiidpiv
BETTY HUTTON ft
WWITM ft
jr bin
III Cltllttl A TvnmovM nctM
Attend the
Klamath
, uucharoo Day
Queen's Ball
See One of These Candidates
Crowned Queen
Of Klamath Iluekaroo Days
JUNE 24, 144
CANDIDATE
Grac Jonas
Fanny Adams
MennUtta Cslmts
Martha Glvan
Ella May Smith
Hln Imlth
Shirley Flsehr
Phyllis Staples
Jan Parkar
Tulslake, Calif.
'. Mmlll
' Kne, Ora
Bly, Ore.
CMloquIn, Ore.
Matin, Or.
Boninis Of.
Mslln, Or.
. Hlldsbrand, Or.
'AT THE KLAMATH
Armory
Music hy Baldy Evans' Band
DANCIHO TO 1
Admission Tax Tetal
Ladies lie Ho 30
GantUmen 91e ...lie MO