Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 07, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    fOUn HERALD AHD HfJWTJ
Wednesday. Feb. 7. 184S
rSAKK JCOCBi MALCOLM tPtZT
tdiuu Nanasint Editor
A temporary combination of On tnifl Krd nd tlx
Kl, ma ta Newa. Puoiunod er-arr ofiomcoo cxrapt Suodar
t bpUnado and Pino uou. Kltrrm rU. Onoe. b tno
Ilormld Publialuzuj Co. ud too Nns PubUUuc Ccmnany.
SD GLANCES
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
monUi t4c Bjr mad
Br carrier .
Rv Mrtttr .
OuUidt KUmath. Lake. Modoc. &ukiou couaut
oothi 3-JO
ar
Entered as accccd daw matter at tbt vctetUn of KUnaU
Fall. Or., on Aufuil IK, unoer act ol
lUrcft V 137
Member.
Mexsber Audit
Bureau CircwUUeM.
21
EPLEY
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
ALONG-TIME objective of Klamath road de
velopers has been designation of the route
from Klamath Falls to Hatfield as a federal
aid road. ' :-JVf
This is a major link on the
important Klamath-Alturas-Reno
highway and it is vital
to our successful road program
that it be placed on the fed
eral aid system. It not only
carries traffic to more distant
points including Los Angeles
by the short inland route but
it also carries the heavy traf
fic that passes back and forth
between Klamath Falls and
the Tulelake district.
After years of effort, it now appears that
success is in definite prospect. At the chamber
of commerce membership meeting Monday
night, Tom Watters, roads chairman, reported
that R. H. Baldock, Oregon highway engineer,
has written California highway officials that
Oregon is about to propose designation of the
route for federal aid.
It was pointed out that the Oregon section
of the road connects vfith a California section
which, also, is as yet off the federal aid map.
Mr. Baldock said that designation of the Oregon
section would be more readily accomplished
if the California section, from Hatfield to Canby,
was also chosen for federal aid. He suggested
California take the proper steps to bring that
about.
The engineer's suggestion is logical and sound,
and deserves the earnest consideration of Cali
fornia authorities as well as the public roads
administration.
o o
Traffic Volume
-IN this connection, attention has been drawn
i I to average traffic volume on the principal
entrance roads into California from Oregon for
fkn in 4 1 U n T I 1 . rr:..
'UIC JCOI IDIli LUC IUI VL'III llUIllllll UdlllL.
Here is the daily average for that year:
--' The DaUesaliforma at Dorris 1818.
; racaic nignway 10m.
Vl.e.U 11- All 11 KB
" Redwood 818.
Oregon coast 789. -
Lakeview-Alturas 554.
It will be readily seen from these figures that
oy far the largest volume of traffic normally
enters California through the Klamath Falls
gateways at Dorris and Tulelake.
-
Pinus Contorta
OUR friendly colleague, the editor of the
Bend Bulletin, has done a little research
since reading comment here a week or so ago
on Webster's definitions of jackpine and lodge
pole pine.
The Bulletin editor found, in Sudworth's
"Forest Trees of the Pacific Slope," the follow
ing notes on the lodgepolc:
"The pine described under this name is one
of the most interesting of Pacific species on
account of its variable characters and on ac
count of its enormously wide range, which
extends from sea level to nearly. 11,000 feet
P. contorta murrayana). The distinction as
sembled to separate these trees are one after
another broken down when the tree are care
fully studied throughout their great range. 1
"In its Pacific habitat this pine is a low tree j
with a dense rounded or pyramidal crown, the !
large, much-forked branches often extending
down to the ground. This form is the result
of an open stand, which permits other pines to
produce a similar form. In very close staixis
it developcs a tail, clean, slender shaft with
short, rounded, small-branched crown. This is j
its characteristic form in its more eastern range,
and has there given the nsune ci )a&cce i
p:ne'. ;
The BuUeta mentions tsat use aescr:puve
name, "contort. v i 4-vea because the appear
ance of the trees" lower branches turned cV.ia
ward under pressure by snow. Sudwwth. iacj
cecially, makes o mentiea of the sarae -ci
pine' which is ireuesCy applsed in lius are to
the loigepcie pe.
The War Today
By rwrrr mucexcs
AsMciared Procs War Aaayvt
ONCE raore "-e have a jvoatei rrsirS
that the Europexs cccf-iM Jini xht SCTiCf ie
in the Pacific areat sfct -ar but are :
interdeperxit-rst, for BeKs's jsicfcy V-oack-isS j
that the Oder :;rer aeienses ac crscijug cot j
piements M ac Arthur s Jrciaas err of "Os w .
Tokyo."
The main thirg oetsSfr.3 Mi irojuejnenx Mac-.
Arthur's sloran in a fcir -kit -s jjaa of j
amphibious landing evjiiiprwK! n-larn iss boec j
held in Europe perxusf: a jnntr. crock -urw
Whether we shall have o a-raJ5 the tmfOc:r
collapse of Hitlerdom before simis Jr5 cc all
of this equipment to the Feis; rrrrjr te be
seen. Some of it may have p.-ot inrward
already.
As soon as this equipment ss avaUabie. Lord
Mountbatten's Southeast Asia cwra presum
ably will start reclaiming Sumatra, ;va, Sing
apore and the rest of Indonesia. Hongkong.
Canton and other points along the China coast
will be vulnerable. Then we shall indeed be
on the Tokyo turnpike.
I i?,. rn i 12
1 1 fef
1 (gi iwir wiHtvq wc i m m m w '
Oiir new voliinti't-r nnlcrlv is a Umk vice prcsiilciil, but
lie wnrncil nic nl to It'll tin- patients because lie doesn't
want In be con Irib iitin loans instrnd tif backrubs!"
Tolling
The Editor
no i.i'Hr n oni io ji i WJ ' MJ
nlfi M mot M UtnM. ",''",,"2
lollaint "'
Rescued
Luzon Dominates Sea
THE full significance of MacArthur's slogan
which of course is based on the fall of
Manila becomes apparent with even a casual
glance at a map of the Orient (and kindly don't
tell me you haven t one handy!). See how the
giant island of Luzon, of which Manila is the
capital, stretches its huge bulk with its air
fields and harbors alongside the South China
sea and dominates it.
The freedom of the South China sea is vital
to Japan. This column more than once has
pointed out but it's so important as to be worth
saying again and again that without free pass
age of this sea she cannot indefinitely wage
war. This is her lifeline to the vital supplies
of Indonesia. It's the lifeline, too, between the
mother country and her armies in Java, Su
matra, Malaya, Thailand, French Indo China
and where not.
So mighty Luzon not forgetting the help of
other Philippine islands now can control this
lifeline. The mikado's conquest-swollen empire
is in effect cut in two. Japan's navy, weakened
by heavy losses and vastly inferior to the allied
fleets, no longer can provide protection for sup
ply ships through the South China sea.
Invasions Appear Imminent
WE may expect the Indonesian invasions to
be under way at the earliest feasible
moment, so important are they to the operations
against Japan proper. Recapture of the East
Indies, and landings on the China coast, will
have the effect of forcing the Japanese armies
in western China to move eastward to the
coastal regions. Thus progressively the allies
will push the enemy back, at the same time
depriving him of supplies without which Japan's
war machine cannot continue to run.
It's a stroke of rare good fortune that the
elevation. For many years a fruitless effort' Burma road (now renamed for General "Uncle
has been made to keep the tree which inhabits
the northern Pacific coast region, extending to
Alaska over the western Cascades, and known
as Pinus contorta, distinct from the tree of the
high Sierras and Rocky Mountains plateaus,
known as lodgepole pine (Pinus murrayana ad
Joe" Stilwcll) should just now have been re
opened, thereby once more giving China land
communication with the outside world. Supply
trains already are crawling along this serpentine
highway through the primeval mountain regions
to Chungking.
From Other
Editors
THE KLAMATH PURCHASE
PLAN
From the Bend Bulletin .
The Klamath and the Lake
county courts, it will be remenv
bered, set out seven grounds for
their protest against the ex
change by The Sheviin-Hixon
company of land and timber for
national forest land. One, in par
ticular, asserted that the ar-
rangement contemplated a tax
dodging device on the part of
ine company, trie charge, made
in ignorance, was speedily
shown to be unfounded but, so
far as we have been able to dis
cover, has never been retracted
by either court. Had the charge
been true lhr eomnanv umiiii
have been open to severe criti
cism for participating in an un
worthy act. Since it was not the
company is entitled to clearance
oy me iwo courts and the lone-
f they delay in withdrawing
til tiKiigc ine more prcju
diced their nositlon will hr
Five of the grounds of protest)
as well, have been shnum in h
without validity. The single re
maining one, relating to the lack
of any 25 per cent return to the
counties out of ihn 1 ranKarl inn
is more particularly a prutf.it
against the general law under
which flic exchange has been ar
ranged rather than one against
this specific undertaking. We
aay mis on ine strength of state
ments in the Eplny column In
the Klamath Herald and News
which have been quoted on this
itse.
In splto of this fact the Klanv
ath court has recently hp.n rn.
puiieu as cnacavoring to creale
or bring about a situation under
wnicn me government will re
ceive cash for its limher nnrl Ihn
counties, then, the 25 per cent
"ivioiuM. mo memoa under con
sideration is for tho county to
purchase the Shevlin-Hlxon Urn
bcr included in the exchange
transaction and for tho forest
service to sell its timber.
The details of the plan have
not been announced and, in
deed, they are probably still
only tentative but the bounds
within which it will operate are
obvious and therefore not diffi
cult of analysis. Analysis de
velops strange contradictions in
the Klamath attitude.
Possibly the most striking fact
In the Klamath plan is that if
the contemplated purchase is
made the Shevlin-Hixon lands
will go off the tax roll just as
surely as they would go off if
the exchange goes through. And,
it will be remembered, point one
in the Klamath-Lake protest
was that the exchange would
put the title to the lands in "a
tax-free agency."
And there is still more In this
phase of the question. Let Klam
ath buy the company timber and
the county has immediately in
volved itself in the expense of
caring for it, managing it as a
county forest, paying for fire
protection and so on. And it
would be years before there was
a crop to pay a return.
Perhaps it should be recalled
at this point that two exchange
transactions arc involved in this
controversy. On one the cutting
Is about finished. It has not be
gun on the other. So far as we
are informed there has been a
formal protest only against the
former but the latter is expect
ed to stand or fall with It. Nei
ther from the news stories nor
by inquiry of the slate forester
have we been able to discover
whether the purchase would be
of the company lands in the first
or second exchange or both. A
stale forest representative says
that the purchase contemplated
would require almost $170,000
but Ihc acreage on which his tig
ures are based docs not fit ci
ther one. Let
.that total of $170,000 and do a
inuo iurincr analysis.
H Is to be assumed that the
proceeds of the government tlm
5" 6alc would equal this $170,
000 and of this sum 25 per cent
K,ul!nntoJi,c counie would be
$42,500. This would not all go
to Klamath county, however,
but would be divided among the
counties in which was situated
the national forest from which
the timber came. If it came from
the Deschutes the Klamath
snare of $42,500 would be 23
per cent. If from the Fremont
the share would be 31.4 per
cent. Let us take the larger fig
ure and in doing so we discover
that the Klamath return would
be $13,450. In other words,
Klamath considers spending
$170,000 to get an immediate re
turn of $13,450.
There would be further re
turns, of course, as the pur
chased timber was harvested but
good forestry on a sustained
yield program would mean no
more harvest for some years. On
the other hand, if the exchange
went through, the national for
est acreage in the county would
be increased and, by the same
token, the county's percentage
share in such sales as were
made. The future promises many
sales.
The present exchange propos
als arc desirable as offering a
means of blocking up tho nation
al forest acreage, giving a larger
area the benefits of sustained
yield cutting and national forest
protection and providing logs
lor the war cftort. The Kiamam
proposal, if effective, would
equally remove the lands from
the tax roll and give the county
lands in a shot-gun pattern of
ownership difficult to manage
and offering only meagre re
turns. We have said here before, and
we now repeat, that we believe
that the counties should have a
return out of these exchange
transactions. The simplest ar
rangement would be for a pay
ment oi D per cent In cx-
cnanged land and timber and 25
per cent in cash lhat would mi
to the counties. Another method
would give the counties an an
nual payment in lieu of taxes
not based on forest receipts but
on a regular acreage basis,
iviamatli, we believe, would be
making a contribution to tlie so
lution ol the problem f it would
work as hard to get the law
changed as it is working to re
cover that 25 per cent In the
manner proposed. It would be
contributing to the war effort,
tuu
Seven hundred students of
dental colleges In England nor
mally are graduated annually.
There are 14,000 dentists In the
country.
t
Market
Quotations
WHEAT
XTW YORK. Teh. T (Ar- Stock
moved in a misret rangr today with
a few leader and aperialtica ahewinf
the principal fa Cm.
Clnsinc quotation:
American Can , W
Am Car & Tdy c:'
Am Tel tV Tel - lti-1
Anaconda
Calii Packini - 2I.
Cat Tractor 45 '
Commrnuraith & Sou
Curtis Wricht 5'
General Electric 3f'-
General Motors .'
Ct Nor Rv nfd
Illinois Central IN
Int Harvester ...... - TS
Kennecott . 3?
Lockhecd
CHTCACO rrh. 1 AT WhH and.
rr Ki;eii unarr tnt r-rure pfoiu
ca!:ftf io.ia,i hut h,tn rwrihi r
Kultrd In raiiv t.hri!v belf.T trw
rin-'f and Irwur Trt wma'l Th
ma-.ndcr of trie iu;urr tin
ickO in irro
Ksviinf order rndrd tn limli the
1ojfk and pro-cKiioiihl Mtppcri dni-lwd
on ail the i-nitl ipwi. I'irmnfM ci c-
marfcru va ttircurirmt to hean and
outsldt mtprtvti wa ltfilii.
At lJif fin'nh whoa i n'as vnrSa$ii
I i.r Inuw ttmn i-il-rii Cl.ta. ViaV
$1 K.V..-V Cn!n ai up ' to -c. May
H.lS'r-'-.. C-at -were ' tt f h'j;wr,
Mu fi-l'.-'.r nt wan r .i-nr to
'-c irwrr Mv n IV- Rarejr aa
up U .r. May H.J1H-
Lonr-Bcll "A"
Montr
Kith.)
N Y Central ...
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas & EI
Packard Motor
Penna R R
Repunnc mmi
RtrhOld Oil
3fewav Stores
Star Roebuck
Southern PsclOc
Standard Brands .
Sunshinv Mining
Trans-America
Union Oil calif
Union Pacific
tt S Stetl
Warner Picture ......
20,
Ml.
7
Potatoes
CHICAGO. Feh. 7 'APi Potatoes: ar
rivals 43. on track M, total U. S. ship
menu 89S: old stock: offerings very
light, demand far exceeds available
track offerings, market strong; very
few reported sales: new stock: nothing
available today's market: Nebraska BUm
Trlumphi. U. S. No. 1. $3.49; North
ni.nta RHu Triumnhs. commercial. 2 flit
Wisconsin Chlppewas, U. S. No. 1, 13.09.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN TRANCISCO. Ttb. 7
fAP-WFAl Cattle: salable l&O. General
ly steady. Quality rather plain. Med
ium to coori steers absent, quoted
S10.00-lfl.75. Few medium to good sltort
fed heifers 91.1.00-14.00. uooa range
cows auotrd SJ2.3o.13.00, Dairy bred
cows S10 00-11.00. Few loads ranncrs
and cutter S7.no-D.oo. common 10 gooa
bulla S10.OO-12.3O.
Calves: salable none. Nominal.
Hogs: salable 100. Firm. Few good
160-270 lb. barrow and gills SU.75.
Good sows 913.00. Demand oroad.
Sheeo: salable 350. Steady. Good to
choice wooled lamhs ouoted $10.00-10.50,
About two decks good 100-130 lb. ewes 1
19.00, sorted IS per cent at S7.QG.
VITAL STATISTICS
JOHN'S Bnm at Hillside hospital.
Klamath Fan Ore . February . 1HV
I la Mr. and fcTrv Henrr Johns, 37B
xiomrnaie. a t.ru ntiai; 1 puunui
l. ounrr Name: G-eri.a D!en.
ZDdAN-Burn at Klamath Valley hos
pital. KiamatM Faiis. Ore., February 4.
1BA5. to Mr. ad Mr. J. J. Zcman. 110
N tuh. a boy. Weignt: 0 pounds 4
ounce.
MILES Born t Klamath Valley hos
pital. Klamath Falls. Ore.. February 2,
1943. 10 Mr. and Mrs. Orvtllc I. Mile.
207 Nevada, a boy. Weight: 6 pounds
13 ounce.
MAY Born al Klamath Valley hos
pi'el. Klimath FM?. Ore , February .
1945. to Mr. and Mrs. Jark A. May, a
girl. We:aht: 7 pound Hi ouncts.
M'DANTFL Born at Klamath Valley
hospital, Klamath Falls. Or . February
S. !, 10 Mr. and Mrs. Emery Mr
Daniel. Dorris. Calif., a girl. Weight:
8 pounds ounce.
MOOHE- Born at Klamath Valley hos
oltnl. Klamath Falls. Ore . February S.
Iti43. to .Mr. nrt Mra. C. L. Moore. 40ja
Shasta way, a boy. Weight: 7 pound
9 ounces,
PETERSON Born at Klamath Valley
hospital, Klamath Falls. Ore.. Fehruary
.1. 1R13, to Mr. and Mr. Lawrence A.
Peter son. 23A7 Knne, a girl. Weight:
3 pounds D ounces.
JOHNSON Born nl Klamath Valley
hospital. Klamath Fall. Ore, Fehniary
7. 104. to Lt. and Mrs. n. f. Johnson.
SOA Summers lane, a girl. Weight: 0
pounds 7 ounces.
PORTLAND. Ore.. Feb. 7 fAP-WFAi
Salable cattle 130, total 223; calve sal
able and total 23; market active, strong;
many cows now 23 cent above Monday;
steers scarce; strictly good to choice
quotable to SI 6.30; few medium to good
heifers $14.00; common to medium
grades $10.00-13.00; cutlers down to S.VO0;
canner and cutter cows $0.30-0.00; snails
down to S3. 00; fat dairy typo cows S0.30
11.00: good beef cows to Si 2.50; medium
to good bulls SlO.OO-ll.7.3; odd beef
hulls to S12.23: common crudes down tn
$3.73; good to choice vealcrs 1 3.30-13.0).
Salable hogs 130. toLal market
active, steady. Good to choice 170-270
lb. $13.73: few good to choice 142 lit.
$14.73; good sow AI3.75-H.0U; (liable
heavy feeder dibs not sold, choice
grades quotable at $1.1.30.
Sheep salable and total 300; few loads
good to choice, fed wooled lambs not
sold, held higher or above $13.23; good
to cho Ice trucklns salable around SI 5.0 11
good ewes salable $0.30-7.00; one lot
choice ewes late Tuesday $7.30, new re
cent high.
CHICAGO. Feb. 7 fAP-WFAl Salable
hogs 10.000: total 13.000; active, fully
steady: all good and choice harrows and
ruui ibii ids. ana up ana most 140-luu
hi. SI 4.73. celllns nrice: odd lots 110 hi.
weights down to $14.25; few lots good
and choice 00-100 lb. pig $13.00; cull
light pigs down to 110.00; good and
choice row all weights 914.00; com
plete clearance.
Salable eattle 16 000! tntal 10.300: sal.
able calves fiOO; total 000; fed steers and
yearlings steady, largely steer run; top
$17.00 on weighty steers and long
yearlings; best light yearling $10.7.1;
hulk nicer and yearling $14.23-10.00;
heifers steady, best SI 6.00; cows and
bulla In moderate supply, cows steady,
bulls firm; vealcrs unchanged at $13.00
down: eastern shipper demand very
broad following the lifting of railroad
embargo to Atlantic eaboard.
Salable sheep 1)000; total DOOO;
laughter lnmh les active than Tuc
day. however, duality plainer, gcnernllv
aiklng fully steady but not enounh
done early to establish market; deck
meaium 10 mostly gooa rea western
lambs void steady at S 10.00, holding good
and choice fed wooled westerns around
$16.03, some interest talking weaker.
Why Thousands of Doctors
Have Prescribed
Pertussin
FOR
Bad Coughs
(DUE TO COLDS) 49
(DUE TO COLDS)
PertuMln mut bo good when thou
Hand upon Uioumindii of Doctors
lnvc procrlbcd 11 for no many ycara.
Pertiiwln act at once to rpllcvn your
coughing. It looiwnn and maken phlegm
esflfer to ralftc. Bafe and effective- lor
both el4 and young, Inexpensive!
Cruiser Coots
. Mackinaws
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
800 Main
Courthouse Records
lvrt-NrsnAV
HICKS-HENDERSON. Eugene Richard
Hicks. 32, farchnuie foreman, native of
Oklahoma, resident of Klamath Falls.
Oregon. Lois Gertrude Henderson. 27.
housewife, native of Ok'ahoma, resident
Of Klamath Fall. Oregon.
WAno.SCHORTGEN. WUHsm P a t
Ward. 22. USMC. native of Mississippi,
resident of Eden. Mississippi. Ditty Lor
raine SchorKen. 16, studeit. native of
California, resident of Klamath Falls,
Orpfnn.
HOWEU,.FNCEI.. Thomas Frank
Howell. 23. II. S. nnvv. native of Tdaho,
resident of Challls. Idaho. Fd'lna Kngnl.
in, boueworkr. native of North Dakota,
resident of Wln North Dakota.
Complaint t Med
Grace n. Herron versus Hugh I.. Her
rnn. Suit for divorce, charge desertion.
Couple mirrled June 10, 1042 at Rno.
Nevada. Plaintiff ak retorallon of
ma'rten nnme. Grace B. Wlker. A. C.
Yadcn attorney for plaintiff.
FUNERALS
MARGARET JANE lU'PNK
Funeral .ervlccl for the 1,1c MarfArtt
Jane Rurni. who pai.erl nwny In thll
rly on 'Fcnruary u. will b held from
the Sucrccl Hrarl Catholic church. Bth
and tlljth. Friday. February fl. 1043.
whnre a requiem mai, will he cclc
brated for the repoie of her aoul. rom
menrlna at 0:.Tn a. m.. with the Hev.
T. P. Caney officiating. Commitment
ervlce. and interment will follow in
itt. Calvary Memorial nark. Ward',
Klamath Funeral Home. 023 Iflah. la In
charse of arrangement.. Friend, are
rcnectfuuy invited to attend ine icrv-tcea.
STRAY8
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore. (To
Ihc Editor) Indeed, It U tru y
juirt tliul "One Imlf ol ttio world
doesn't know how the other
half lives." I w grcntly
shocked to learn thut there re
so muny stray children or youiifl
folks In town. The "city dads
must indeed be asleep, as siig
nested by the letter from the
KUHS Crater, that they haven t
noticed all these strays on the
streets!
I d siiKRest that they have a
census taken Immediately, both
on the streets to find out how
many struys thero are, and ol
tho town, so places can be
found for them to stay until
the families can be located, or
if thev have no family left the
orphans can be cither adopted,
put in private homes or a home
could be organized In one of
the hotels with the youna folks
doing tho work under the di
rection of a housemother and
a housrdad, loo, so the boys
i.j..t ....i i!f'tiH." I nl
sure they would be glad to help
with the worn oi aeepnia uim
home in order to. have some-
i.i.... A in liflrle rnltm tllC
streets. It seems a pity that no
one has noiicca ineir piiKm w
f. iKi .inr according to
the letter, thev were so anxious
to get out of the stray status.
Then they would have a
chance to go to school and part
of their lime outside of school
hours would be taken up with
studies.
As for the amusements need
ed: since the marines and sail
ors havo places to cat and sleep
and lounging rooms at the Bar
racks, perhaps they'd be willing
to turn over their recreation
rooms in town to tho poor
strays that luivc no homes to
go to.
How these poor strays must
long for some of the home life
depicted in the comics in the
papers and told about in all the
books they've read in the II-
i. .. -. -. . wA t.n.n mnm fnr n
couple of boys and maybe a girl,
loo, to oc ine sister our
wished for, if some of tho strays
...A..l.t tlln tr, llvn etn tlif. fnrm
and help with the work that's
always piling up. ninco nicy
,mrnA nnvir.M. Ill milt thl KtfAV
class, perhaps othr tn town
and country would be glad to
give them homes In exchange
fnr some help around tho house.
Help is so nnra 10 gci now wun
so many people employed In
wnr work that I'm surprised
the town folks haven't already
taken In these poor strays to
help In their homes.
I've heard that in largo cities
one could llvo In the same place
fnr un.r. nnrl nnl krtnu thrlr
next-door neighbor, but I didn't
realize that Klamnth Falls was
n hit thnt fhf-rn rnillrl h HO
many strays around and no one
Know aDoiK mem.
Tf len't an tnttrh fhnt mnff!
amusements arc needed to solve
ine juvenile delinquency prop-
11.111 .3 UU.lUi (.III. II, U.I. pn.v,.,n.
I ..1 A Wn r.Urt.tlnn IcolnlnrJ
IUIIIIUI ni.w .iiiinunii ..
A recreation room for teenagers
wouia oe a kudu iiiiiik ii ijiui
1.. T m ..... . nl kn
UI IX uviri Iui;ii, a u.i iiiaii v vi hiw
young folks' only religion is
pleasure tmayne ine om ioiks,
Innl Until thai matnritv nf
young and old study and prac-
IIIU Will lailtllt 1IVIIIK IIIKIC Will
continue to be delinquency
problems. -
oinccrciy,
NIT A KING.
RATMONn king m.r.nson
Funeral pervlcea for navmond Kins
nt.rf.fu. Infant inn nf PFC and Mr,.
William K. Bl'd.ne will r held at the
ftrave. de In the hahy D ot or LlnKVllie
cemetery on Thuriday. Kebntary 8.
Ifl45. at 2 n. m., with Chaplain Ollmer
nf the Marine Barrarki oftlclallnf.
Ward'a Klamath runeral Home, OSS Hlh.
la in Charge of arranftomeni..
Airplanes, Engines
Destroyed by Fire
WALLA WALLA. Feb. 7 (PI
An estimated 20 airnlanes. IS
engines and assorted tools were
destroyed by fire at the Martin's
nlrport in College Place shortly
before midnight Inst night,
The blaze, spread by a high
wind .through hundreds of gal
lons of gasoline, destroyed . the
hangar and two work shops,
Herman L. Martin, airport
owner, said he heard an explo
sion while sleeping in the admin
istration building, and immedi
ately sounded an alarm.
(HF..4 Ttt.pholo)
"Those Ranters gave me mure drama
In 16 mtuulci thun 1 expect to co In
all the real of my life," said Majoi
Paul It. Wing taoovei, father of ac
tress Toby Wing and ftirnirr Acad
emy Award winning Hollywood plio
toarapher. who was freed by Amrrl
can liaiiKera and Klllplno auerrlllai
after spemllns more than three yean
on Luton as a Japanese prisoner.
r,om. h KUr, tk .. 1
10 '"cult "our. :i0nli
Vl': 1" IranZ'
;- from Uieri M
"i coilli; to cre. :VMtll
r' dlMrleVo,,,?l
cotllily, l JJ
. - miiiin ine. I.. " I
ny erlllclwd- '"
""II Wilt) hv n,t I 1 J
wiilerwuvs In 11 1. ?, i
ch.r.edih.'W1,
SUPPLY SERVICE
WASHINGTON, Feb. 7 iVPl
Ma). Gen. Francis Joseph
Kcrnau, 80, who oi'gaiiUcd and
commanded tho army service of
supply In World War I, was bur
led in Arlington ecinolcry yen
terdny with full inllititiy honors.
Gen. Kcriutu made his winter
home In Ditylonu Ueach, Flu.,
where he died lust Siiturdtty
afternoon at Welch Convalescent
hospital.
After the war, Gen. Kernun
served as technical advisor to the
American commission lo negoti
ate peace with the Germans In
November, 1018. Prior to his
service In France, ho was com
mandant at Camp Wheeler,
Mncon, Gn.
At the outbreak of the Spanish-American
war ho was serving
with Lt. Gen. Arthur MacAithur
In the Philippines.
He was a native of Jackson
ville. Fla.
OPPOSE LEGAL GAMBLING
KLAMATH FALL8, Ore. (To
the Editor) The editorials of
February 2nd nnd 3rd In the
Herald and News concerning
Legalized Gambling were
brought to the attention, of the
Klamath Falls Council of Church
Women In their regular meeting
held Monday, February 9.
The matter was discussed and
action taken that a letter be
written to the editor express
ing their disapproval of Legal
ized Gambling.
KLAMATH FALLS-COUNCIL-
OF CHURCH WOMEN
Mrs. DeniBon, Secretary.
If It's a "frozen" article yon
need, advertise for a used ono
In the classified.
Lumber Mitts
Heavy Gray Leather
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
800 Main
Poor Digestion? 55
Headachy?
Sour or Upset?
Tired-Listless?
Do you fol fientlsehy snil upset iltie tri
poorly diumtrd food? To feel cheerful
nd happy nealn your food mini ba
digeated properly.
Each-day, Nnttirn must produce about
ttvo pints of a vital digmtlvn julrn to
help dieat your food. If Nature fulls,
your food may remain undigested
lcavinir. you headachy and irritable.
Therefore, you mttsLincreamthe flow
of this dlgesilve Juice. Carter's Uula
Liver Pills Increase this flow nulckly
often in ss Utile ss 80 minutes. And,
you ro on the road to feeling; better.
Don t, depend on srtlffclsl side lo
jounieract tndlncstlon when Carter's
Little Liver Fills aid dlioatlon after N
ture's own order. Tsk Carter's Llttla
Liver Pills directed. Oct tbom at any
drugstore. Only 26.
The War
At a Glance
By The Associated Press
The Western frontt U. S.
third army Invaded Germany
anew across Sure and Our riv
ers on 22-mllc front, assault
ing Siciifrled line; other
Americans closed In on Priim
and on Schmidt, the .lntter
guarding vital Roer- river
dams; Ncufbrlsach In Alsace
near the Rhine was occupied,
The Russian frontt Rus
sians in Silesia shattered
Germans' upper Oder line;
nails reported defenses crack
ing all along the river; Soviet
forces astride broad super
highway leading 180 miles
northwest to Berlin; Frank-furt-Kustrln
sector, 30 to 40
miles from Berlin, under
heavy pressure.
The Italian frontt Stale
mnle broken as fifth army at
tacked southeast of Bologno,
gaining Initial objectives.
The Pacllle front: Dough
boys battered trapped Japa
nese on both sides of Manila's
Paslg river as enemy put
torch to heart of city; Corregl
dor blasted by Amorlcan
bombs; Americans scaled off
all peninsular roads at base
of Bataan, drove south on
eastern edge; Supcrforls raid
ed Thailand and Inclo-Chlna
targets.
TAX
ECONOMIES
Are Available
Through Life
Insurancel
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
Nq PAIN - NO HOSPITALIZATION
No l.oaa ef Time
Parmananl aaaalui
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Cnlropraetle Pbralelan
It Na. 7l - Kaaelra Tbaalre Bias
Phoaa TfMS
r
i
i
i
I floAn off, JfotUtan.
EQUITABLE LIFE
Assurance Society "
jp 114 N. 1th rhone S'JII S
Flashes ol
Life
Bv Th ....!..
clrailt calendar 2XZ
Uia Wnsiilnjion. Dlw
Pirtlei U( .
couple.
,
IT CAN HAmHirrJ
JEFFKItSON ClffH
... , .juincune in the VJ
stale pemleiill.ry Ii
h. . n stolen from the
aiuniibly, o f flcliliu?
trusty, '
tsrvnn
SPOKANK W..1, u
ViV Joseph A. Koiitt, j
Uinbnni, Calif., wounwl
an o( tlie South pacific J
titttt 111 an armv hAH!il
found it profitable toipj
iiuiiwiijr irujrm.
All llllnrncv. tvhn l.,il
trymii to locale i rtliUtu
Into Joseph A. Koslcroltt
an, Wash., heard him sped
Pvt. Foster found hi n
cousin's heir. The Inhtritu
etudes a home, thin n
unes. sjtiuv In cull nil
war oonai.
a t
NO HAt,r 'H' HAD
PITTSBURGH, Feb. Ii
Drinking members t,
klnsbiug Elks' lodge in
to havo to watch their Hr,
clubhouse is located en 0
line,, part In "wel" Pint
and part In "dry" WiHii
Judge L. Kenneth
grunted a llccruc jrri
which permits the lodji 4
liquor only in that poni
the building which to hi
ourgn.
Hans Norland Auto Ivcf
Phone 6060.
AT
uyom
Any PluUoqranh
I Copied, I
One Vrlnt I
$1.00 I
Films dovolopsd and printed
ior any 6 or 8 exposures
Roll OSe
Raprinis 4c each
Prompt Service
BUD'S
1031 Main
Phona 7167
Wanted:
Men who'd
like to weri
with trains
Tf vnn'ri like lo help nal
... to work with the &
and engineer ... II I1
lo go places and do 1 1'
is really lmport.nl, yon!
to look Into till" Jo
man with Southern Pi
train you for It In I"
(and you're paid J
ing). The pay, by any
is very good U an h
Job . . . wllh mcn 'I;
And wllh a company
Rest Job begins when
Is finished - ,movln,,i i
loud aRiilnst Jnpnn. " !
slendy, rollnblo . , .
looks ahead and who
real connection wl "
cresslvo outfit, Ihll
your job. Fine IgJ
R.R. pns privilege-
service,. Many
other Jobs open.
try.
Sea or write Train""
s p. Station, KIM'"
,r nearest S. P.H
mm
m flag1
Aeouafleon FREE
HIAIIHO CUNIC
Friday and Saturday
Feb. 9-10
1 to t P. M.
Wlnama lintel
Klamath lain
4.rui inw PRICES
iltirMlnperavatti
Cnslawwim,. .-Ann
Ontaw t-m' lit
at a "-
roryourwv.nl.ncrUMhJ
.dentine prot ' Jpfl
hosting of Mr
b. restored so SJ
rlal,m,l pl.ee In hontaajjk,
Hf., The new Future A"
bsi.iitlncallylK,eia
hMrlnjofcoNVSWAltorii""
and let us prove 10
ACOUSTICON,
. fj. C. Mltch.ll."!'"
-, III Mln.r I""-.' ,,V
HJ01P