Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 13, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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- PACE FOUR
.v TrNKIKS MALCOLM EPLEY
rI,A,WrS MMMini Editor
SUBSCRIPTION BATES: "
By c.rrl.r montr , n. By rn.,. gjj
Mtmrwr.
Aaaoclatcd Pre
Member Audit
Bur.au Circulation
EPLEY
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEV
PRECIOUS little attention lias beer, given to
the various measures to appear on the city
ballot in the election which is now less than a
month away. Of the four, the one dealing
with the proposed Veterans
Memorial park has been most
discussed, but it is doubtful if
more than a very few Klam
ath citizens have gotten the
real significance of this pro
posal or have glimpsed the
vision which lies behind it.
Regardless of what happens
to this measure, the public
should understand this vision
because it is something that
should be kept alive in Klam-
-il v.it. Thi ,-nltimniKt.
am rdus. ,.. - . .
probably like many another. looKeo. a or. comiy
upon the Veterans Memorial park plan until he
learned what brought it into being.
The Plan
WHAT is proposed, specifically, is city ac
quisition by trade or purchase of an area
on the banks of Link river and Lake Ewauna,
bounded by Main street, Center street, the lake
and river. This is not a large area, and we
suggest that all citizens' make it a point to go
down there and look it over before election
day. It is one of the unsightly parts of our
town, lying in a position that puts it square
in the eye of the motorist driving into the city
from the south or west.
The immediate plan is to remove from this
area all of its ugly old buildings, smoothing
it out and planting it to lawn and shrubs.
Eventually, the area may become part of a
civic center development, but the early improve
ment does not hinge on that plan. It can stop
at the end of the first phase, which is what is
before us now.
City-Wide Significance
THE project was conceived in the city plan
ning commission, and back of it lies a
conviction that Klamath Falls must decide
whether it will remain a rough bonanza town
or grow up into a settled community of per
manent homes amid attractive surroundings.
It was the thought of the commission that a
prominent improvement of this nature would
lead the way toward a higher level of public
and private property improvement throughout
the city and its suburbs. Situated at a main
entrance, it would give the. city class and
pride.
From such a project will stem park and
playground development throughout the city, as
well as home beautification and other private
property improvement. It is simply a first step
in the direction of a different Klamath Falls.
And .let us point out that there must be a
first step. Not everything can be done at once.
Those who have their own favored projects
would do well to look upon the Veterans' Mem
orial park as a foundation upon which will be
built a community-wide program benefiting all
worthy1 projects. Klamath will realize its des
tiny as an attractive city if it does not permit
intra-city sectionalism or petty jealousies 'to
block the first step in that direction.
The magnificent Oregon state highway pro
gram is an example of what we are talking
about. When it was started years ago, it had
tough sledding, because every community want
ed its particular road job done first. If those
with such narrow sectional prejudice had pre
vailed, they would have stymied the entire pro
gram, thus defeating their own objectives. For
tunately, broad vision prevailed, and through
steady development Oregon has achieved a
grand statewide highway system.
Klamath can become a handsome city by the
same route.
W Vote Yes
THIS is the significance of the Klamath mem
orial park plan that deserves full public
understanding. It is not a scheme for one
part of town as against another part of town.
It is not designed to benefit any particular
individuals.
The long-time vision for Klamath Falls, just
now embraced in this program, must be kept
alive. Wo do not think it will be wiped out
even if this measure is defeated, for we believe
Klamath pcoplo will see it and support it in
the long run.
But tiic passage of this' proposition at the
November polls will start us on our way. This
column favors the measure.
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 Continuing a non
critical analysis of the Dumbarton Oaks
program for postwar (see column published Oct.
12:)
Nothing in the text designates Washington as
the headquarters for the new League of Nations
after this war, but the program will start what
eventually will be a very large world adminis
tration which must be convenient to the centers
of all phases of world activity.
There is to be a military staff committee,
made up of the chiefs of staff of the United
Nations, permanently advising the security
council as to how to meet aggressors. In effect,
this international military staff would conduct
the future wars, or blockades or military ac
tions against non-cooperative powers. It would
be a permanent international war department.
Disarmament, diplomatic, economic and other
committees unquestionably would be required
to maintain sufficient permanent offices to ad
vise the security council about what actions
should be recommended to the nations.
Council Supreme
IN these vital matters the security council is
to be virtually supreme. On peace or war.
the new league is to be controlled by the major
United Nations in consultation with a few rep
resentatives of the smaller powers on the coun
cil. But in other matters, the second compon
ent part in the new peace setup is to, have
major authority.
A cencral assembly of all the nations (each
with a single equal vote and therefore beyond
direct control of the big United Nations) win
make recommendations concerning "economic,
social and other humanitarian problems," al
though it also will have a hand in drawing
recommendations for disarmament and regula
tion of armaments.
' In economic and social matters, the assembly
however will be required to work largely
through a committee of 18 (each member one
vote.) This committee also is to be a permanent,
continuous body, whereas the assembly will
meet regularly but once a year to receive
reports from all the others, make appropriations
and devise recommendations. The commit
tee no doubt will become an enlarged replica
of the League of Nations commissions on labor,
health, opium, child welfare, social conditions.
In everything, all these various committees at
bottom can only recommend action to other
committees, not take any itself. At top the
security council can recommend action to the
various nations, but has no military or economic
force of its own.
The revolutionary character of these pro.
posals (now being rather generally approved)
is not fully evident, because the agreement is
unfinished, but these following conclusions al'
ready are inescapable:
'
Harder Try
THE .theory upon which the League of Nations
was built is to be tried again, but harder
now, and under our leadership, whether these
will be more successful no one can say. The
organizations proposed will have no more value
, than the use that is made of them.
These texts will be no more important than
actions taken. They constitute only broad
charters and contain nothing that is fundament
ally new, being merely the league-plus the dis
armament treaties, plus the old world court, plus
the Kellogg-Briand pact (avoiding the Atlantic
charter and the four freedoms in the statement
of principles although these goals could be
within the province of the new United Nations
league if leadership pushes the league in that
direction.)
, Why the old league failed is historically moot.
It collapsed in the face of the Japanese invasion
of Manchuria and disintegrated when Mussolini
invaded Ethiopia. My personal opinion is that
it failed to stop these repudiations because no
one wanted to go to war over those questions
' Britain, France or any other power.
If we had been in the league I suspect our
leadership would have been as evasive and ap
peasing as Britain's and the French, reflecting
the will of their people and ours at that time.
Whether a new formula will escape this gravest
aeieci oi tne old, no one can say.
The future of this program therefore must
rest wholly upoii the future intentions of Russia
and the United States who will have the bulk
of military, economic and political power in its
operations. The whole regime will be no better
or worse than their intentions at any given time.
SIDE GLANCES
mm?.
rf wu wmm. mc t. ma. u.
"All I've seen is pictures of those foreign hussies kissing
our soldiers, and I can't help thinking how" Bob always
wants to be in the thick of things I"
Market
Quotations
choice limbs $H 00 uperingly. nnwtlum to
good imn h'bh"''- -
lder iu .w-iu.w; rw '
mostly common to lootJ M 003 00.
NEW YOPK. Oct. 1-1 (APt Stock mr-
ktt special lie continued to attract
upcculatlve and Investment demand to
day althoufh recent leaden had to
itrugilt to maintain their balance.
tiosina; quotation.
American Can 90
Am Car te Tdy - JON
Am Tel & Tel r lJJi
Anaconda ...........
Caltf Packlni . 27
Cat Tractor
Commonwealth ft
CurtU-Wrinht
General Electric ,.
General Motor
Gt Nor Ry pfd
tllinolB Central ...
Int Harvester ......
Kennecott
Lockheed
Sou
40
1518
lonjt-Bell "A"
Montgomery Ward,
Naah-Kelv
N V Central
Northern Pacific
Pae Gaa & t
Packard Motor ...
Penna R R
. MS
. 40',
.
. 80' i
. 35' .
. 23''.
. 12't
, B3
, lfJ' j
. lfl'
. 16',
321
Republic Steel
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores
Sears Roebuck
Southern Pacific
Standard Brandt
Sunshine Mining
Trans-America ..............
Union Oil Calif .
Union Pacific .
U S Steel
Warner Pictures
100'a
- 39i
tan
...ions
PORTLAND. Ore.. Oct. 13 (AP-WFAt
c.i.ki- nnri intal rattle SO. calvei 10;
mostly cleanup market; supply largely
canner-cutter cows about steady ai
$4.30-0 oo: shelly cows down to M-OOi
few cutter-common steers and hetffr
i7.SO-9.00: cultercommon bulls M 50-
7.00: food-cholc vealer ja'ahlo 91J.UQ
lt.itu: grass caive 914. aw guwn.
s.iiBhl hnn SO. total JXJl niarkel
active, steady: few good-choice 160-200
ik ciitv iu in. iia.uu: iooq iuwi
largely t.i. 50-75: choice feeder pigs late
Thursday 33 cents higher at $14.25.
Salable and total sheep 150; good
choice woe led lambs lacking: salable
around $11.25-75; weeks extreme top
1 9 rev iar Inia rnmmAn.mfdlURl AO lb.
eastern Oregon feeder lambs $6 50; few
good wethers .i.zo-.uu: menium
2.30: good ewes salable 3 00-23. Sizable
lots common grade unsold
WW I 'Hi 1 iir !' 1 1.! ,1 M Ml ! i'
Mi,
From tht KUmath Republican
Octobar 6. 1904
a. .1. 1 ti'llu ni'rt nliinnhlQ tO
i-MiniHI mrt I - "
establish a loclgii In that city, now
that it l approaching the re
quired popiilullon o( 5000.
Oil
ter.
Hiiv will be plentiful through'
t ihc Klamath basin this wilt
From th KUmith Nwi
Octobtr 13. 1834
Ruoniri's footbiill tonm rlcfcMt'
ed KlHiimth Falls, 10 to 6, yeslcr.
day afternoon here.
A Inlnl nf 17.00(1 Enstril brook
trout liavo been planted In Lko
Odcll.
Courthouse Records
Msrilagfs
WH1TI EY PrU'lTT. C. P- WhlHoy. 31.
i. fi irmv air force. Native t Texas.
resident of Levellsnd. Tx. Billle Sue
Pruitt, Ifl. housewife. Native of Okie
noma, resident of Klama'h Falls.
n. 20. U. H. marine. Native of Uh
liidiin. rfttlriniit of Ornvltlo. Wath. Iter-
bara Lotilie Noble. 11. telephone oper-
a tor. native oi I norma, riam ui
Los Angftes. .
GRAVM-GRAVM. Clyde
Grftvei. 35. carpnier. Native of Mm.
resident of San Francisco. Kunlce Celts
Graves. 3. housewife. Native of Ore
gon, resident of Aania Crtu.
rMntti.i riwd
Rrisle Flouise Roe verut Arthur
Jackoon Hoe. Bull for divorce, charge
cruel and inhuman treatment. Couple
married In KUmsih Falls. August II,
10,15. Plaintiff aiks custody of two
minor children. J. C. O'Nalli, attorney
for plaintiff.
Jukllre rurl
nruea lUmrwi Drunk In a pnv4'
place. Fined S0 and 30 days, the 30
davs suspended on good behavior.
Donald Fairest Me) field. No clearance
lamp. Fined W. .. .
Fred Sankey Merrttt. Indian. lUvIng
alcoholic liquor In possession. Fined
SiA plus 7.30 coats and M days.
TMrn roster. Indian. Having alcoholic
Houor In possesion. Fined Vt plus
57. iO ens is and 30 days.
Fore River Workers
Return to Posts
niimrv. Mans.. Oct. 13 M'l
A majority of the strlUnii hl
workers at the Foro lllvor yU
of tho Ucllllehcm biooi turn
puny, cstlinati-d bclwuun 4000
mid 0000 ictuinod to work
Tl uiwlay. ending n lhi c d.v
at ppo whli-h had thicaleued
to tie up craft construction.
Tho muMi "back to work''
movement followed a voti
: v...i,. uiiin hud roce Wod
n propornl to mhmlt grievances
to ino nw
tlon and arbitration.
Tho propoMil wu ucccitcil
lat night by tho exccutlvf)
board of the slate Independent
union of I'oro filver workers.
With Freight
r)UNSMUIft,Culf.,0tt,
The second section 0 ( '
m, en louto rem pott;i
: ' into ti,,
end of a freight (, "I
on tho trucks In ii,, Vl
I'uclftc yard nl Cinh,,? S
south of hero, nl Msi'i',1
No onn w Iniur.
Tho pasMiiger locon'iotJ
M. nailer tirinnra )ri J
hnnKrt fll.rl ntiM r-i-i..
riuniaged In Hie colllno
seipieul firo. aK
Hns NorUnd rtrTuTj
Dh.n. snnn "S
POTATO GROWERS
Get Our Deal
Before You Se
Dehydration Buyers
Terminal Market Sipperj
CALL JACK MEZGER
7232
Potatoes
CHICAGO. Oct. 13 (AP-WFAI Pota
toes, arrivals 87; on track 203: total
U. S. shipments 1025; supplies moderate:
demand for Idaho RusscL moderate;
market stronger for U. S. No. 2 and
utility trades, steady for U. S. No. 1:
northern stocks: best quality, demand
good, market slightly stronger; Idaho.
Russet fiurbanks. U. S. No. 1. $3.00-3.15;
Minnesota and North Dakota: commer
cials $2.20-2.40; U. S. -No. 1. 'washed
$2.30-2-75; Cobbler commercials 12.30
2.45: Wisconsin Chtppewas commercials,
$2.33.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 13
fAP-WFA) Cattle salable 100. active,
fully steady; two loada good 720-750 lb.
northern feeder heifers $11.50: half load
good 1015 lb. range cows $11.25. For
week: receipt 2100; generally steady:
grass steers $13.2513.75: medium to good
heifers $11.00-12.00: good cows numer
ous $il.0011.50, bulk canners and cut
ters $4.00-8,00: food early clearances.
Calves none, nominal: for week: 275;
medium to choice calves $13.00-14.00.
Hogs salable 100: twenty-five centa
lower: few packages good to choice 200
240 lb. barrows :and gilts $15.50; few
good sows $13.75. For week: 3700; clos
ing 50 cents lower.
Sheep salable none: nominal; for week:
receipts 4900, rather light: week's top
CHICAGO. Oct. 13 lAP-WFA Salable
hgt 5000; total $000; active, fully steady;
complete clearance early; good and
choice 150-340 lbs. $14.75; weights ovor
240 lb, and good and choke sows $14 oo.
Salable cattle 3000: total 3500; salable
calves 300; total 700; receipts mainly
cows: sprinkling good cows tuady at
$12.75 13.50; most cows 15-23 cents lower;
few loads good and choice steers $13 00
17.23; latter price lop; cutters and com
mon grass heifers and light grass bulls
weak to 25 cents lower on peddling
basis; vealers weak at $lt)ik) down,
mostly $13.50 down: wide movement
stockers and feeder cattle this week at
$in.50-i:v 00 mainly.
Salable sheep 3000: total 4000: native
lambs slow, weak to 25 cents lower:
good and choice mostly $14.50. soma held
ilrhtw hlrhftr! mixed medium to choice
lnrnbs $14.23. common $10.50-11.50: no
action on load shorn yearling wethers;
laughter ewes sieaoy ai 90. gown.
WHEAT
CHICAGO, Oct. IS fAPl Reports of
Hied gains In Germany gave rtsi to
innrshsmlnn In tha craln futures mar
kets today and prices broke sharply In
tne rtnai minutes 01 iriomi wnwn imtn
began to liquidate rather than carry
their holding over night.
The demand was limited in all pits
and the final flurry of selling found the
markets unable to absorb the offerings.
Shortly before the close prices had
rallied under short covering stimulated
by trade reports that this year's bumpor
corn crop would permit a second whiskey
holiday during December. At the close
wheat was lJi to P.c lower than Wed
nesday's close. December $1.021i4.
Corn was off I's to I'iC December $112.
Oats were down ' to fe. December
63i-',ic. Rye was off to I'iC De
cember S1.06S-a. Barley was Is 10 ic
Gen. Campbell Urges
Preparedness For
Inevitable .Wars
SEATTLE, Oct. 13 (IP) Maj.
Gen. L. H. Campbell, Jr., U. S.
army chief of ordnance, declar
ing nrpnaratlnn fni thn "nnv.
war" would "save precious time
and more precious lives," urged
last night that Puget Sound
ordnance contractors keep alive
their association.
Speaking before the Puget
Sound post of the army ordnance
ssociation, and the military af
fairs committees of the Seattle
and Tacoma chambers of com
merce, Gen. Campbell said:
"Preparedness must bo your
policy. Keep your association
alive. When the next war
comes, and it will come, for wars
will be fought as long as men
are human, be ready. If we are
set It will save precious time
and more precious lives."
WEATHER
Tburidar. Oelnb.r 12. 19H
Euffflne .
Klamath Fall!
Sacramento
North Bend
Portland .
Madlord
Feno .
San Franciico ......
Seattle
Max.
60
6.1
7.1
Sf
!S7
6
...7.1
Min. Preclp.
J.4 .00
43 .02
.on
.is .00
Trace
Trace
FUNERALS
WALTER rLOTO CULLEN
Thu funeral service for the late Walter
Floyd Cullen, who passed away In Mer
rill. Oregon, on Wednesday. October 11.
1R44, will be held from the chspul of
Ward's Klamath Funeral home, 025 High,
on Monday. October 16, at 2 p. m. with
the Rev, Ferguson of the First Pres
byterian church of Merrill, officiating.
Commitment services and lnlermnt will
follow in the family plot in Unkvlllc
cemetery. Friends are recpecUully in
vited to attend the services.
JAMES EDWIN NIX80V
Tha funeral service for the late James
Edwin Nelson, who pasted away near
Maltn, Oregon, on Monday. October fl.
1944. will be held In the Tulelake Pres-n-ter
Ian church, Tulelake, Calif., on
Saturday, October 14 at 2 p. m.. with
th Rv. Hugh Bronson officiating.
Commitment services and interment will
-A Vacation Observation-
Thera was a rich puy named MeBraer
Who when his Sweat Woman drew near
With a lot of Tinvel folders under her arm
Depped his book and with voice filled with alarm
Atkad Whera's My Vacation to ba spoiled This Year.
English Walnuts 37c pound
phon. 84GB ft IDELLA'S s. m
tULJ: A Gal!
7 V '
follow In the T.lnkvllle r.metery of
Klamath Falls. Oregon. rrlendi are
respectfully Invited to attend the aerv
Icea. Ward', Klamath Funeral home In
charge.
The barbed stinger of the
worker bee pulls off in the flesh
of its victim and results in the
death of tho bee.
"Irish Eyes
Are Smiling"
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN . NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Lose of Tim
remanent Reaoltal
DR. E, M. MARSHA
Cfalropraelie PbTstelen
ttO Nc. 7th Esqnlrt Tbealrt BI4c
Phena lofts
i.
HARTFORD
Accident and Indemnity Company
INSURANCE
T. B. WAITERS
General Insurance Agency
FIRE . . . AUTOMOBILE
615 Main St Phone 419$
ONION and POTATO BAGS
NEW AND USED
50-lb. and 100-lb. Onion Bags
Used Potato Bags
Burlap and Cotton 100 Lb.
Immadiata Delivery Klamath Falls
LOW PRICES
Coll I. Winkelmcn
WINEMA HOTEL
Or Come To
2401 South Sixth
ELKS
Dancing Party
at the Club
Saturday Night
October Mth
Informal Corne As You Are
fe Mystery Music
Ralph R. Martney, Ur.
INVESTMENTS
STOCKS and BONDS
Affiliated With
John Galbraith & Co.
Portland, Oregon
California Oregon Power Co. Stock
(COPCO)
BOUGHT
SOLD QUOTED
604 Medicol-Dentol Building
Tetophone 6261
TME mn JUDGE SAYS...
iiM AZ0,a1n -our ruroer expert! knew how to im
"wllv ""V ia,nJL,t' It but the probem waa to get tteW
rr,Kii uTV hn-Ht w.W,.nounU of Industrial alcohol nW.
ttnh? JLS u tJlLribi!fuPrucin, ft. k mo't overniRht the country', beverage to
. "wh.l;?'T J''''-k$)m to the production of this wiuH?!
. When the Jap conquered the big natura W Vedimt. a hioh .r.mnt nffidal u
. ruoDer producing center of the world they I recently (hi. . . .imnat unnarall!1
inoiiffnr. thpv hH u. i.ui n... i ..." ." '
ahort years, thanka to American industry.
., i "u PIOUting synmetic rubber
I I enough to supply all our military and
1 essential civilian needs, aer '
ictcnuy mis was ...an almost. uni" ";M
examnle of Ihe nvemlnht tonvereion Ol
i entire industry from peace to war.'"
"Come to think of it, Judge, it
I mighty fortunate thing the beveragewj";
- ling industry waa in existence, wasn t w