Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 21, 1944, Page 8, Image 8

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    PACE EIGHT
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Novi
ii
QUICK PASSAGE
OF FLOOD BILL
hits obstacle
WASHINGTON. Nov. 21 P)
Plans for Quick passase of a bil
lion dollar flood control bill ran
today into an argument over the
St. . Lawrence seaway recom
mended by President Koosevelt.
Instead of acting on the bill in
a matter of Hours preliminary to
taking up a $500,1)00,000 rivers
and Harbors authorization, the
senate faced the prospect of a
controversy tnat migni run into
next week.
The plans were snagged when
Senator Aiken IR-Vt.), insisted
on presenting his amendment au-
tnormng tne seawa. even as
the senate moved toward debate,
Aiken kept his colleagues in
doubt as to whether he would
offer his amendment for the flood
bill or the rivers and harbors
measure.
Should Aiken hold his amend
ment for the latter bill, the St.
Lawrence controversy would be
removed from the flood control
measure, but there would still
remain arguments over slates'
rights, hydroelectric power de
velopment, and irrigation, as well
as several big projects.
The house-approved bills call
for postwar construction of
flood control, hydroelectric facil
ities, harbor works .and related
projects throughout "the country
a program backed in principle
by President Roosevelt to create
a shelf of public works and jobs.
Only recently the president re
newed his long-standing request
for approval of the seaway, es
timated to cost from $200,000,000
to $400,000,000.
Senator Aiken wrote his
amendment several weeks ago.
refusing to go along with Chair
man Overton who called a senate
commerce sub-committee meet
ing today to determine whether
a treaty with Canada would be
involved.
The bills are beset by several
side issues. One group has
brought up the issue of states'
rights being affected by the fed
eral government's broad jurisdic
tion over inland waterways.
Members from the Missouri
valley are demanding changes to
give reclamation preference over
navigation and other water uses
in the arid west. Present law
leaves the decision to the army
engineers.
Another controversy revolves
around an amendment to ex
empt California's Great Central
valley from a 42-year-old recla
mation law limiting to 160 acres
the land of any owner which
can De irrigated from federally
financed Trojects.
Marines of First Division Return to Homeland
km
1 9
4 M
r
I-
"T.v '2
! UKlV fT I iMPV I, .. ANNA'S K
Officers and enlisted men of the first marine division crowded vanlaae Dointi aboard their
transport at it approacnea ban Diego, Calif., for their tirst glimpse of their homeland in 31
months. The marines, 3551 of them, were veterans of Pelehu, Guadalcanal and New Britain
campaigns, lAf wirepnoto from marine corps).
Oklahoma Couples Unable
To Divide Earnings in Tax
Computation, Rules Court
WAVES Enlistments
Cut For Oregon
WAVES enlistments will be
curtail d, effective December 1,
with , only a limited number al
located to Oregon, according to
Dan Schreiber of the Klamath
Falls U. S. navy recruiting sta
tion. .
Beginning in December, only
enough WAVES will be enlisted
nationally to provide replace
ments for the WAVES now on
duty. The goal set for WAVES
enlistments-will be reached by
December 1, due to the record of
approximately 5000 enlistments
per month which has been main
tained for the past- year.
. Although quotas now are be
ing ..duced, young women of
Oregon will have the opportun
ity to cualifv fnr WAVES or,.
listments as in tl.e past, except
that applicants in the future will
be placed on a waiting list and
enlisted when openings are
avajiaoie.
World Assembly Plan
ravored by Author
a PORTLAND, Nov. 21 (JP)
iiuuior x.ann wynner favors a
wunu HMemoiy pian super-imposed
on existing governments
as the best method for insuring
permanent world peace.
Speaking before a women's
club here yesterday, the co-auth-
ui ordii:niigin on feace
Plans called for the organiza
tion of a new level of govern
ment with authority to deal with
world affairs, make world laws
and use money to enforce them.
She asserted that a flaw in a
new league of nations or the
Dumbarton Oaks plan was that
no national government can be
forced to do anything against its
Construction Labor
Needed At Barracks
Carpenters and construction
workers arc urgently needed for
the expansion program to get
underway soon at the Marine
Barracks, it was announced by
the U. S. employment office
Tuesday.
Contract for the work was
awarded to Brennan and Cahoon.
who submitted the lowest bid.
$1,075,400, when bids were
opened Friday. They will build
12 barracks, six barracks store
nouses, an extension to the stor
age building, a swimming pool,
gatehouse and ntllltip.
o
Refrigeration
Equipment Co.
Karl Urquhart
611 Klamath Phone 6455
For
Commercial
Refrigeration
SALES and SERVICE
WASHINGTON. Nov. 21 (P)
The supreme court decided Mon
day that under the Oklahoma
property tax law a man and his
wife in computing federal in
come taxes may not divide
equally their total earnings.
Justice Roberts delivered the
court's 7-2 decision. Justice
Douglas wrote a dissenting
opinion in which Justice Black
concurred.
Roberts said that prior to
1939, Oklahoma had no policy
"with respect to the artificial
being known as a community."
He added: "Nor can we say
that, since that year, the state
has any new policy, for it has
not adopted, as an incident of
marriage, any legal community
property system. The most that
can be said is that the present
policy of Oklahoma is to per
mit spouses, by contract, to al
ter the status which they would
otherwise- have under the pre
vailing property system in that
state ...
"We think it immaterial, for
present purposes, that the com
munity status may or may not
be altered by contract between
the parties, or may not be
avoided by antenuptial agree
ments, or that certain assets of
a spouse mav or mav nnt ho
classed as separate property
excluded from the community.
The important fact is that the
community system of Oklahoma
not a system, dictated hv
state policy, as an incident of
matrimony."
in the dissent. Douelas sniri
that today's court decision dis
criminated against Oklahoma.
ine only apoarent basis for
such discrimination is that the
community property system in
the eight states are traditional;
that those eight states have a
well settled policv: that- Okla.
noma merely gives its citizens
a choice to get under or stay
out of its community property
system.
"T h e distinctive feature of
the community property system
is that the products of the in
dustry of either spouse are at
tributed to both; the husband is
never the sole 'owner' of his
earnings: his wife acquires a
half interest in them from their
very inception. If Oklahoma
meets that test, then she should
be treated on a parity with her
sister states. The fact that her
system is new-born does not
make it any the less genuine."
Hearing Date Set
For Heating Company
November 27 has been set for
the war labor board's hearing on
the Klamath Heatine coniDanv
case involving wages, hours and
working conditions, it was an
n unced today by Earl Edsall,
head of Teamsters local 911.
I he hearing will take place in
Seattle.
.
Classified Ads Brine Results
PILES
Crowell Sought For
Stealing Daughter
PORTLAND, Nov. 21 (ZD-
Authorities still were senrching
today for Marshall Crowell, 52
charged in a felony warrant
sworn out by his divorced wife
with stealing their 45-year-old
daughter, Mary Amelia.
The child. Mrs. Delia Evans
told police, was taken from her
homo tridny, the same day a
Portland auto court manager
said Crowell registered without
the girl.
Sgt. Virgil Weckcrt of the
sheriff's office said that Crowell
showed him an old court order
giving him custody of the child.
The district attorney's office,
however, said that Mrs. Evans
had permanent custody and that
Crowcll's order was apparcnly
temporary.
If it's a "trozen" article vou
need, advertise for a used one
in the classified.
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515 Main St.
Phone 3829
Bo sure it's PURE CANE SUGAR
insist on i
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REFINERY-PACKED CONTAINERS
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P.M.'uhelime. PM't llm order. "Two, pirate, at llii
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Mailn with famous I'M do I.nxo Wlilnkoy . . . PlnaniiiR.
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IST'S FINISH THC JOB. . BUY AN CXTXA WAR BONO
N..I.-.1 ni.,mer. Prl.H. Corp, N. T. nUM WM.k. JI6. IW. 81 ,.,, WM.k-,. -W Cel. Ne.,,.1 !,pl,l.
Fifty-six persons, mothers and
children, from tho Tulclnko
segregation center, loft Klumath
Falls by train Tuesday for
Crystal City, Tex., where they
will be rounltAl with heads of
their families in an- internment
camp, tho war relocation author
ity announced.
Thirteen families com prised
the groun and lis or tho trans
forces were children 18 years of
age or under, lrnnsler was
made under Jurisdiction of the
department of justice which op-
crates the Crystal City camp.
Male heads 01 the families were
transferred from Tulclnko to tho
Santa Fe. N. M.. Internment
camp last summer.
Jessup to Lead Ad
Executive Group
VANrnnvpn n n M.. 01
(Canadian Press) John H. Jes
sup, publisher of the Bremerton,
Wash., News-Searchlight, was
named president of tho Pacific
Nnrtliivrw Alt,n,-i lul.w, li'v,,.,,,.
tives association hero yesterday.
a. B. Wallace, national ndver-
tisintf minim,,., it llm 0,-.,f,n
Journal, was elected secretary.
DlirinB th rnnr,-A nf t),n Hnv'c
session, advertising executives
were warned by C. T. Constan
tino flinlrmn.. nt tl,A Ur.-I. I ....
ton chapter of the American As
sociation of Advertising, that
while newspapers were the most
cons', uctive of all advertising
media, radio nlso offered some
advantage and lha newspapers
should not tako their inuillu fur
g .1111 led.
Constantino also roimrlcd that
ini' iiiai'ui-e m Mi-liming news
paper advi'i iiKing spiu-o ti
n i ,
in i i ' ""MIt
UMlllll. sIhI,,,, ,.. "'" Pl'OVCll
8 e&l HM Fud
,w a, tx&k afte uwc &feef
jti j . " "i?ce
As A tzt ...
Ayy
y f ccti fWZ C0fifee
Tiwk-Mirlui Rrf. U.S. Vni. Off,
w
I
COOKIE
KHP ON HUYING
WAR BONDS AND
THEN KEEP THEM I
PASTEURIZED SKIM MILK
GIVES IT GOODNESS
&uS8co
r ' ...
LI. 'I U! .'-n.
You are the shipper of this freight
Next time you see a trainload of tanks, or guns or jeeps, re
member that this war material belongs to you. Your taxes
and War Bonds paid for it. You are the shipper. Japan is
the consignee.
. To conquer Japan on her homo islands, enormous quanti
ties of war material must still bo bought and paid for.
1 he purpose of the Sixth War Loan is to start raising tho
money for the final Big pU8h against Japan. Every American
is asked to buy at least one extra $100 bond-at the bargain
price of $75.
You buy the bonds. American industry will make tho war
Materials. We'll roll 'em to tho ports of embarkation. Our
fighting men in the Pacific will do the rest,
The friendly Southern Pacific