Thursday, FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM KPI.EY Editor Manasln, Idllor . umnorary combination o tha Bvanuif Harald and th, Klamath Nawa. Publlahad avarr .IWrnoon axcapl Sunday .1 fpl.n.d. .nd Plna alraata. Klamath Falla. Oraion. by In, H.rtld PublUhlng Co. and U Nwi PuDllahlns Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: n.. mrvnth 730 By null .f months W.,3 nv carrier year T.90 By mall Bv carrier year n.w or rrrr Outaldo Klamath. Lake, Modoc. SlaXlyou counUaa yoar W jaar MOO Knterd aa aecond claaa matter at Uia poatoiflc, ot Klamaiu ralla. Ore., on Aufuat X. 190. under act ot coojiwa. March a. in Member. Auodated Press Member Audit Bureau Circulation Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY TWO interesting local cases of tardy service ; rejections have come to attention recently. In both instances, the men involved passed their first physical examinations in Portland, and were told they were sure to go into the service. So they closed up their personal affairs, gave up their jobs, and left on the appointed day. But the medicos who exam ined them on the second oc casion rejected them, and they came back to pick up loose ends and to resume their civil ian life after an interruption that was unnecessarily incon venient and costly. This doesn't happen often, we are told, but it docs- once EPLEY in a while. The reason seems to lie in a variance in the examinations and the examining medicos. . e Legislation at Half-Way Point OREGON'S legislature has now been in ses sion 25 days, which is just half of the num ber of days for which legislators will be paid. If they keep going beyond 50- days legislative sessions usually go well beyond the allotted period they will- have to serve for nothing. At Salem, an effort is made to curb the late introduction of bills by making it necessary for house members to get permission from the legislation and rules committee for dropping in bills after this date. That plan helps, but .usual ly there are a lot of bills' that come in through committees or with the approval of the rules committee. No such rule exists in the senate, where new legislation can be introduced with out restriction. . .In California, the legislature is now taking its mid-session recess, giving gislators a chance to catch their breaths and get the reaction of their constituents to measures introduced in the first half of the session. We have always re garded this California plan as a good one. County Manager AT the November election, voters authorized the preparation of legislation that would set up the machinery for a county manager form of government A bill to provide this machin ery has now been introduced by Representative piles French of Sherman county. , This bill, if .passed, will not force the county manager plan on counties. It merely makes It possible for those counties whose people vote for it to set up the manager plan. ; Weyerhaeuser Land Policy IN discussions of the forest land Exchange issue, which has been in the forefront of public Interest here for several weeks, the question has frequently been raised as to what would happen if Weyerhaeuser Timber company, ' Klamath's biggest private forest land holder, would undertake a wholesale land exchange jrogram with the forest service. ..Tiis is answered in the current issue of the- -rch of Pine," Weyerhaeuser's local house V : V Because the Weyerhaeuser holdings are of such vital public interest from a tax base and sustained industry standpoint,' we be lieve the article is worth re-printing here. Here it is: The question has been asked recently: What would happen in Klamath county if Weyer haeuser should do as many others have done and exchange their cut-over and timber lands ;for the privilege of cutting national forest .service timber? ' This is not likely to happen for one very ' ' Igood reason the Klamath Falls logging op ieration is a Western Pine Tree Farm and was 1 certified as such on August 5, 1943. The term Tree Farm was adopted by forward booking timber owners to show the extent rto which privately owned commercial forest I lands were to be managed on a "timber crop ping" rather than a "cut out and get" basis. Certain standards are set to qualify a Tree Farm, the first of which is: "to maintain a specified area of land for growing forest .crops." Weyerhaeuser publicly accepted this iobligation in accepting tho Tree Farm Cer tificate and it is very unlikely that Weyer OF FOUR HERALD AND NEWS dent of the round-up in 1940, succeeding the late W. H. Switi ler. Prior to that he had been livestock director for the show, during which he owned the cele brated bucker, "No Name." Editors' Meeting Cancelled by Head CHICAGO, Feb. 1 (.IP) John S. Knight, president of the Amer ican Society of Newspaper Edi tors, said today the society's us ual spring meeting in Washing ton had been postponed. He Issued the following state ment: "It is the unanimous opinion of the board of directors of the American Society of Newspaper Editors that the annual April Washington conference should be Indefinitely postponed. "While we feel that our year ly meetings with leaders of gov ernment and the armed forces have been of Inestimable value to the war effort, it Is likewise our considered judgment that no exceptions should be made to the general rule." Iron filings spread on magna tired plane propeller blades re veal hidden flaws. DBA PENDLETON, Feb. 1 (p) 3. R. Thompson, 68, president of the Pendleton Round-up, vice president of the Rodeo Associa tion of America and well-known wheat and cattleman, died here last night of a heart ailment. Death came suddenly, al though he had been in poor health for some time. A native of Chestervillc, Ont., Can., he came here at the age of 14, attended the old Weston nor mal school and for a time was a Bharmacist in LaGrando and 'ayton, Wash., before returning to Pendleton to engage in farm ing. ; Thompson was elected presl- rrzrrruiove' Meat Cutting . .' . . and Curing Plant W cut and wrap meat for your lockers and moke .your hami and 1 bacons Phon 4282 919 E. Main Cotton i Flannel Shirts Plain Colors or Plaidi OREGON WOOLEN STORE Main and 8th February I. IMS haeuser lands in Klamath's Tree Farm will become government property, taken oft tax WBut what would happen if this plan had not been put into effect and the land cut clean and exchanged. In Klamath county are ap proximately 314,000 acres of land owned by Weyerhaeuser with something like 201,000 acres logged to various degrees. Assessed valuations on this land amount to about two million dollars. Without the taxes from the Weyerhaeuser holdings tho tax levy for other property holders in the county would jump from 30.2 mills to 32.7 mills, or for each $1000 assessed value of property outside the city of Klamath Falls and its suburban area the increase would be 52 50. In the city itself the increase would be $1.30 for each $1000 assessed value. In Lake county the increase would be greater for Weyerhaeuser owns 25 per cent of the total assessed valuation of the county. If Weyerhaeuser went off the county tax rolls property owners could expect a 25 per cent increase in their taxes. Not only does Weyerhaeuser plan on main taining the timber land already owned by the company but in the pas' three years the com pany has taken over nearly 63,000 acres of deserted, cut-over timber land, much of which had been taken by the county for tax de linquencies. Of this reclaimed land about 4000 acres were bought from Klamath county and 3000 acres were purchased from Jackson county in 1944 alone. The rest of the acre age had been purchased from individuals or companies prior to becoming tax delinquent. The largest area in this last classification was some 43,000 acres of cut-over in both Lake and Klamath counties previously owned by Long-Bell Lumber company. Another was approximately 10,000 acres bought from Hovey-Walker interests and was only part of their total cut-over area, the remainder of which was within national forest boundaries and went off the tax roll through the ex change procedure. . Property owners in Klamath and nearby, counties can put a dollars and cents value on the stake that they have in helping main-. tain the Tree Farm. With community assist ance these lands will stay in private owner ship, help carry the tax burden and will be managed so as to grow continuous crops of trees under a policy of management similar to that of the national forest service that will still carry a share of the tax burden. The War Today By J. M. ROBERTS JR. (Substituting for D,Witi McKniI) REGARDLESS of the outcome of the battle of the Oder,, which approaches hourly nearer, there are two items in recent German dispatches which, overshadowed by the Russian advance along the Warthe, nevertheless may play an important role in Hitler's collapse. A few days will tell whether the Germans have been able to devise any real defenses before Berlin whether the Russians are to con tinue unchecked, or whether they will have to stop at the river to pull up their galluses as they did at the Vistula last summer. However, if the Russians are at Sorau farther south, as the Germans say, any massing of nazl strength in the Frankfurt area may mean little more than have the holdouts at Torun, Posnan, Elbing and Konlgsberg. . a a e ' " Inside Defense Area WHILE Sorau is twice as far from Berlin as Frankfurt, there is one big difference. It is 30 miles west of the Oder, well Inside the area where Germany was supposed to have strong defenses. That could mean much or little regarding defenses farther north. The import ant thing is that the 75 miles between what the Germans call Marshal Konev's northern anchor and Berlin is through flat country, somewhat more wooded than Zhukov's direct route, but criss-crossed by only minor water courses. If Konex is making a major effort there (and it would be normal for the Russians to keep silent about such a move until its outcome was foreseeable) the German army and Berlin could be placed in a position similar to that which would have occurred last fall had the western allies, crossing at Arnhem, pushed up the east bank of the Rhine toward Dortmund. Clock Runs Down THE other report serves more as a reminder -that, regardless of any delays which may occur at the Oder or because of such "banzai charges" as that of the Belgian bulge, Hitler's clock has about run down. The Germans men tion renewed Russian attacks south of Lake Balaton in Hungary. That means the German army is under actual attack, with the exception of a few very short, stretches, on more than 1500 miles of front,' Before the Russian offensive began, before the losses which Hitler has taken recently on both eastern and western fronts, he was credited with 2000 men per mile and he couldn't hold them. The conclusion is too obvious to mention. German Oil Hit By Yank Bombs ROME, Feb. 1 (iP) Italy-based bombers of the U. S. 15th air force struck their heaviest blow yet on a single target in drop ping 1357 tons of bombs yester day on nazi oil installations in an area 22 miles northwest of Vienna, allied headquarters an nounced today. Ground action along the en tire fifth and eighth army fronts again was confined to pa trol engagements. BORING MAN KILLED , GRESHAM, Feb. 1 (P) An drew J. Minyard, 53, Boring, was killed this morning when struck by a car on a street here. Deputy Sheriff Ralph Davis said the car was driven by Mil lard A. Chase, 34, Gresham. "7" """" ll-taat -j--- --uwta pruf ovlafc. . . -.-Wp-fODDUW , rmrn of itld laalaarttm. Mia no mill.. wlTT- "7-""a a ,oo tithe, awl wtk, up u, u,, Bwn ( Ilia a si.ooo.om. n.i.T win fuva aMa ' '??.M. Oat tn - wwi at roar AroMltt-. " """'a mMar-back (auta ?ffil Mi Mfflfll 1 B 17 it I SIDE GLANCES core. in ar Kuattvicr. t. Rata u. ,at. or,. ... . t-l "Now stop fussing! Cim Johnny help it if he has a cold? Here's his snow shovel and here's his list of customers they mustn't be disappointed, so sec tint I you don't miss a si""' "nc I" 46 Apply Here for Marriage Licenses The fact that .leap year van Carolina Patrol Plane Said Missing SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 1 W A navy Catallna patrol plane, with eight men aboard is missing along tho northern California coast, the western sea frontier headquarters said today. The big ship was en route from San Francisco to Seattle on a ferry flight. The eignt men aboard were navy personnel. The last report from the plane came by radio shortly after noon yesterday. ished with the arrival of 1945 has not changed the status of cupid during the month of Jan uary, according to the records at the county clerk's office. There were 48 applications for marriage licenses, as compared to eight decrees granted during the first month of the new year. The latter was not the final tab ulation at the office of the cir cuit court clerk, however. You pride yourself on taking good care of your nails, your hair, your home a . . but how about your eyes? Remember, your eyes should have a complete scientific examination every year to be sure they are giving you the best possible service. So come in tomorrow and see the registered op tometrist at your nearby Standard Optical Company office. You'll be frankly told if glasses are not neededl GET A COMPLETE EYE EXAMINATION NOW! 1 o atA" i 0000 ...... '!:V;V- ' rr' 1 1 - A Stylish Guaranteed Glasses CRAFTSMAN MADE FACTORY TO YOU! DR. BYRON FRIEDMAN, 775 Main St. HHRH ilHiliiii i 1A L. mmA I From thi Klamath lUnubllcdii r"bruary 2. 1805 Charles Morrill of Morrll . will exhibit a pair of Kliiiimlli county mules l tho Lewis and Clark fair. t James II. Drlscoll, home from a visit to California, s.ild the range Is wonderful rignt now In the Marysvllle area and that ful beeves are alrtudy being killed there. . From the Evanlna Hrald February 1, 1835 The Herald came out editori ally today with a doinnmt thiil work be started on tho Weed Klamath Falls highway between Mldkind and tho Greensprlniis highway rt a "sensible work-re- llcf project." A successful president's birth day ball was held ut Mnlln. Tanker Name to Be Modoc Point PORTLAND, Feb. 1 (P) Names of Oregon landmarks will be given to four tankers among 13 to be launched at Swan Is lvind shipyard In April ami Mny, Kaiser company officials snul today. One will bo christened Che mawa, for the Indian school north of Salem; others Modoc Point, site of a Klamath county Indian settlement; Fort Lane, pioneer Jackson county fort, end Bradford Island, which anchors Bonneville dam. TAKES OVER EUGENE. Feb. 1 (') Dcane Sccgcr, Eugene's new city man ager, took over his adininlitrn tive duties today. Seeger will work in the offlco of the city recorder until other room Is pro vided. Twenty-one presidents of tho United States were lawyers. I registered optometrist in cnorga. -r r 1 r - 1 , I,, - ?frimFt$m& ... . .. iftftV s f JaMba. '..V. -'.3 in Klamath Falls Friends Meet kAnt D-Ll Whn."''!! V.. w is iixlnu , , mujj lte.m,l, R r"'WJ ""l enune t3 "'. a Slllll ,m ''. ij Uncle In th. 5lhch.p,,J tlons Paul -1...N, n.as .loa wlth , ol th, Mf In mind spiritual Jo.u, ,.d( 7h ptocoodolh out ol ti. h ""' from within, out o J. of m.n. .,11 ,hou j c.d, foritle,tt(;'' murdor.. adult.rln. . 2nd Lt. Joiiph Z. Hlllli (right), Klamath Fnlli. mat an old friend from Llbby, Montana, M'Sot. William Dean Court right, crew chl( on a 15th AAF B24. whan both were as signed to fly on n combat mis sion somewhat In Italy. Hlllla was with the Oregon Equip. mnt company her prior to his nllatmtnt In tho army air corps. clvlouin.,,, , Ino. lirllla. ,v tl.pjo thing, tm within, and d.flU UuJ Frlond of mini, (, Ink I ho Yes, thay ar (till going up thr. Whora? Why, up to Chan's ollle. Room 203. Odd Fallows' Building to ha thalr ' Incom Tax ilqured out. Let I Chas chu It down. In vain? Do you lil joksa? Momambti tig. ol th, abundmct ol lav u moum ipcik-ih." L man thlnkail, t. li. t is h. L,t no eornpj Shpllned WORK COATS Watar lUpollont 1REG0N WOOLEN STORE Main and 8th M.u.iikniivni procef4 your mouth." lUymond 1. 0lbbi,EiJ Church of Chris 2205 W.ntlmd An H If"1 A -Attn" 'i' ' rjf 110 THING D 0 W ti. A WEEK! ....ii NO INTEREST NOtXiiv" anneti