I rOUH HERALD AND NEWS
Monday. Aug. 20. 1945
FRANK JKNKIN8 MALCOLM KPLIV
Kdllor Managlne; Editor
A temporary combination of the Evening Herald end the
Klamath Newe. Pubiuhpd every afternoon except Sunday
it E.planedo end Pine etrecU. Klnmelh Palls. on. "y the
Hereld Publlahlng Co. end the Newe Publlahlnt Company.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
By carrier month 7o liy moil
By carrier ......year wi.au ny men Wrw
Oulelde Klemalii, Lake. Modoc, Slekiyou counllci ...year 10O
..! montha ta.JS
..year eo.uu
worth $100,000,000 or more to Oregon, Klamath
tourist enthusiasts have been talking in terms
of $10,000,000 a year.
This is not hay. But we should build this
business on a long-time)! sustaining basis, and
we should see to it that tho rush to make the
most of the immediate tourist trade does not
spoil Inc state tor our own enjoyment and for
attracting visitors in the future years when the
business will be badly needed.
Member,
Aaaoclated Pren
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
EPLEY
restrictions on
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
THE postwar tourist rush to and through
Oregon hns already started.
Wo attended a state tourist promotion con
Saturday, and it was agreed
that the immeaiaie proDiem u
not inducing visitors to come
to this state but accommodat
ing those who came and in
providing an atmosphere of
courtesy and hospitality that
will spread the good name of
the stale and make for more
tourist business later on.
Resorts and hotels in many
parts of the state, where there
are tourist attractions, are al
ready booked up for many
weeks, indicating the rush
began the moment wartime
travel were raised,
There is a vast reserve of both spending
power and a yen to travel. This is being
released at this time, and for a considerable
period ahead we could probably not stop tour
ists from coming here if we wanted to. Oregon's
immediate' tourist problem, therefore, is not
inducing travel, which is what most people
have come to think about in connection with
state tourist promotion policies.
.. e e e.e
Revive Cpurtesy
THE first thing the group at Salem did, after
a conference with Governor Snell, was to
issue an appeal to Oregon people to revive the
hospitality and courtesy that went pretty much
by the board in the war years.
'- It is not necessary to go into details about
what has happened to courtesy in trade re
lationships, and to friendliness shown by "na
tives" to strangers. We do not think this situa-;
tion has been serious in our own community,
but some of the stories told around the state
certainly indicate a need for re-vitalizing every-t
thing that is embodied in the term "western
hospitality."
This may not appear to be immediately im
portant, with travel continuing at a high level
and accommodations at a premium. But the
people who come here now are going to get
impressions of the state that will either help
or damage us in the years ahead when tourist
business will be needed as a vital factor in
supporting the state's economy.
In this same phase of the problem is the
matter of supplying tourists with proper infor
mation. This is not wholly a chamber of com
merce problem, by any means. Many more
information contacts are made at places where
tourists obtain services, such as restaurants, -hotels
and gasoline stations. :: There is talk of a
statewide education program, using motion pic
tures, etc., and local "schools" for people who'
meet the tourist trade.
Accommodations
THERE' is a definite feeling among those,
studying tourist prospects that Oregon lacks
the proper accommodations to take care of the
business headed in this direction. This applies
both to hotels and to tourist camps.
There must be reliance upon private enter
prise to make up this deficiency, and we suspect
that private enterprise will react rapidly when
business starts going by the door.
If Oregon public and semi-public bodies de
velop an aggressive tourist promotion policy,
investment possibilities in connection with the
tourists will be quickly apparent to the public.
This is a matter that is vitally important to
individual communities, and . we hope that it
is not being overlooked by the people who
should be interested in that sort of thing here.
Incidentally, the local situation is somewhat
affected by the uncertainty of highway routing.
The chamber of commerce has had numerous in
quiries from persons interested in investing in
tourist facilities here who need to know where
the highways through the cities are going to be
located. Public bodies .and others have urged
that these decisions may be made soon, and now
is a good time to repeat that appeal to the
state highway commission.
Don't Spoil It y
4E feel that : conservation has to go right
W along .with any tourist development pro
gram in Oregon. - It is the state's natural at
traction that will do more than anything else
to bring visitors to Oregon. If we permit our
roadsides to be despoiled, our lakes and streams
to run out of fish, our primitive areas to be
"destructively developed," we will kill off the
very things that form the basis of tourist busi
ness. There is also a need for developing local
recreational facilities that will attract and hold
visitors. Swimming pools and parks belong in
this program. They not only will add to local
living enjoyment but will make Oregon cities
attractive to visitors.
One can see there are many sides to the
problem, and perhaps it needs a study by some
such agency as the University of Oregon school
of business administration. Some of the prob
lems will tend to solve themselves, but others
call for planning, inter-community coopera
tion, and statewide policy.
The tourist business in postwar years may be
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 Calamity-howlors
are still wailing that the discovery of
atomic energy means "the suicide of civiliza
tion or world socialism." I beg to report not
necessarily. Those are not tho alternatives with
which the world is confronted. There is a third
' course visible, a plain and simple one, although
no one seems to be mentioning it.
Every time man develops a new and possible
horrible unknown quantity, all imaginations,
Wild or tame guess what the world is coming
to, and it never has gone there. This time
the more serious seers are trying to guess
whether it will be utter-destruction by fire at
long last as prophets promised, or an atomic
wonderland of great constructive advancement
In civilization. All we know is this government
has something which would certainly have
destroyed Japan (when we developed full pro
duction) but after that, all is theory. Nothing
has been successfully established yet, except
the world is playing with bigger dynamite.
. e e e e -
Greater Fear
ONLY a few months back we all rocked in
horror and trembled (editorially at least)
because the rocket bomb discovered by the
. Germans was to wreck civilization. Why a
- madman in the Himalayas might someday hit
' the Empire State building. Now all that fear
has been rendered obsolete by the discovery of
a greater one.
' Truth is, nothing military has been discovered
in this war except methods of expansion of
fields of destruction. A few short centuries
ago a man on a horse had an advantage, en
abling him a wider field of destruction in war
than a man afoot Then the advantage went
to the man with armor plate, but eventually
' it was pierced by a lance, and the man with
the lance was the most powerful destructive
. force on earth. Bigger armor, . better lances
gave way, degree by degree to artillery, then
to planes, then tanks, bigger bombs and now
the atomic bomb.
SIDE GLANCES
Adequate Defense
NEVER has there been discovered a weapon
for which: there was no adequate defense.
The scientific aim of offense has been bestirred
most in man. He always has discovered first
greater weapons of attack, but in time these
have never failed to develop necessities for
and therefore the inspiration to conceive an
adequate method of defense. The offensive dis
coveries are really effective only while they
are new, and before defense has found the
answer.
A proper answer to the atomic bomb Is not
. only to be expected, but is the logical next step.
So much for the military angle. The net re
. suit on that phase is the expansion of war from
a battle' line or field which may be far from
civilization. The world- has become a single
battlefield.
As for the rest of it to come the commercial
use of atomic energy you can let your imagin
ation skip along where it will, because no one
knows. The horse as an attack facility also
pulls the plow, or did, until the tractor (fore
runner of the tank), brought greater ability to
produce food. Dynamite; you know, first blew
up tree trunks and cleared land, and it moved
mountains for road construction in the service
of man. The constructive use of the atomic
energy theory depends on our future ingenuity:
It may supplant or challenge the use of coal,
steam, fuel oil, gasoline, water power and
electrical energy, but I am always skeptical'
of vast prophesies from unknown factors. We
thought beforehand, this war .would develop
along the lines of poison gasses and wholesale
scattering of pestilence with germs as a weapon.
It took a different line of development we
could not forsee, the use of liquid fire, for 'in
stance, which, .incidentally seems to me little,
less inhuman in ethical and moral theory, than
the atomic bomb or what we thought the war
might be. By this I mean, the future 'will
bring us a different conception of the' atomic
energy theory than any now held.
e ' ' e e
Political Use
BEWARE of one Immediate use of the bomb
development the political use. Those who
do not wish man to be free; say he cannot be
free with' such agencies of destruction present
in the world.. Others will try to develop selfish
deductions, warped to justify whatever political
action they wish to take. It may make navies
and even armies, more-obsolescent, along with
"universal" military training (the youth draft)
and the international setup for peace by a
security council directing armies jointly (maybe
all we need is a few bombs, which incidentally
are controlled so far by the U. S. and Britain).
No political action of any character is justi
fied yet.
But one paramount thing Is apparent. Mr.
Truman must set the minds developing this
bomb to developing the answer to it immediate
ly, and that part of the matter, might well re
main a permanent secret. Discovery of a new
poison, without the antidote, is a job only
half done. Certainly nothing could contribute
more to security and constructive world ad
vancement than completion of the task in as
complete privacy as protected the development
of the atomic energy theory in its first military
form. Along this line runs the more logical
open course. Upon it lies the remedy.
core. -tew piau entree aw. Title.
nwiir.
Mott To Speak
At Graduation
MONMOUTH, Aug. 20 (VP)
Representative Mott will be
commencement speaker at grad
uation o 19 degree students at
Oregon College of Education on
Wednesday,
Students include: Jere Sim
mons, Albany; Alta Isabelle
Jewell, Independence; Gloria
Louise Gebers, Grants Pass; Rob
ert Lewis Keuscher, Salem. .'
A GEM of THOUGHT-
There Was a tank driver named Dreer
Who said, "There", a knock In our motor, I fear."
But the mechanic said,
"Your outa your head.
That's bullets hitting the chassis, you hear."
40 MM Shell Casings 29c
From Doc and Idella's Drug Store
Phone 8468
ALL WOOL
SHIRT & DRAWERS
2-Pieee Union Suits
OREGON WOOLEN
800 Main
. ATTENTION
FARMERS
We pay highest
cash prices for LIVE
or DRESSED POUL
TRY. Phone 5175,
or tee your neareit
Safeway market
operator.
"This book tells parents how lo raise' children without
using force, Johniiy put it where they can read il and
you cau even play hookey without a licking P
Boy Scouts Hold
Overnight Outing .
NEW PINE CREEK Boy
Scout troop No. 40 held an over
night outing at the lakes recent
ly. The boys arrived thf re quite
late and roiied-in rignt away in
the blanket rolls on the ground.
They were up bright and early
Sunday morning and went eag
erly about the task of preparing
breakfast. Everything was fine
until Chief Cook Dairy Ham-
mersley decided that hot cakes,
bacon and eggs were not enough
so he proceeded to add gravy to
the menu, in tne aosence ol reg
ular flour the scout chef as
sumed that hot cake flour should
do just as well. The concoction
looked pretty good until it com
menced to raise. Scoutmaster
Pearl Stewart said the boys be
haved admirably and he is anx
ious to take them out on another
overnight trip. '
USES Resumes
Regular Service
All restrictions on labor as
under the war manpower com
mission have been lifted accord
ing to Jack Almeter, manager of
the U. S. employment service.
Almeter reports that the full fa
cilities of the V. S. employment
service are again available to all
employers., including'': those to
whom services : Were;; restricted
because of war - requirements.
All restrictions on advertising
for help in out-of-arca papers
and radios have been lifted. An
expanded service will be ren
dered veterans of the employ
ment, service to assist them, in
reconversion 10 civilian employ
ment, Almeter saidv : .
" FAIR OPENS " '
GRESHAM, Aug. 20 WV-The
39th annual Multnomah, county
fair opened today, with, record
crowds anticipated, officials
said. Crowded"' livestock barns
promise strong competition for
$15,000 in premium money. Pen
dleton Round-up Queen-' Donna
Boylen and her court will be
fair visitors today. .
''Classified Ads Bring Results.
i!
Klttniaih''s
liififiggSgl
Pram':
lllliiioao'
,,,,
090 arid 10 rri! ago,
8-J Hl!!'i;iil';ilW;ii!'li' pWm
From the Klamath Republican
August 17, 190S
Roy Hamaker, James Wilson,
Lester Kirkpatrlck and Will
Baldwin returned today from an
outing on Spring creek.
The Ackley Brothers' sawmill
Is under full steam dally and is
sawing 15,000 feet a day..
From the Evening Herald
August 20, 1935
The Golden Rule store (now
Penney's) will be enlarged with
a third floor, Proprietor E. W.
Vannice said today.
Earl Whitiock today an
nounced the opening of his
Memory Garden. adjoining
the Whitiock Funeral home at
Sixth and Pine.
HEARINGS PLANNED
PORTLAND. Aug. 20 (PI
Public hearings on proposed im
provements or tne bmitn river
will be connuctea be.piem.Der la
at Rcedsport,..Col. Ralph A. Tu
dor, district, army engineer, said
today.
VETERANS! 1
A handbook of valuable I
Information II ready for
you. Call or drop In.
YOUR
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EQUITABLE LIFE 1
Assurance Society
114 N. 5 Ik rtene lltl I
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The
War Today
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
Auoclattd Prtii War Anilytt
SO
"MrrrXraAMrMrMrWWVVVVWWeaVVVV
rTonmimii'lt'S to tho great
drumu of Jaimnosn formal stir-
renrter hitvo been station in Mu
nlln by General MucAitliur with
iirm o u t quiet r
dignity mi ulll
Uiitu calculated
to roinind tho,
mikado's 16 cm-!
I ssnrles that
they wore In. the
presence of con-r
quvrors but not.-!
bullies.
T h e supremo
c o m in u n d e r
(who personally
t-Antn inftrl nlrwir
from tho con- MacKENZIE
fcrenoos) scums to havo struck
the huppy medium which will
best- servo the Interests of din-:
rmlnn tho Japiincso nation,
both physically and mentally,
and so tond to -create a stablo
peace. Some folk lire doing a lot
of worrying for fear wo won't
use tho Jans rough enough, but
thus far nothing has happened
to encourage the Idea that we
are being soft.
Nip Cooperation
MticArthur hns boon proceed
ing with shrewd authority. The
signs aro thnt tho mikado's emis
saries nave been deeply Im
pressed, and In fact have known
very well that they wero in tho
ircsence of their masters, Tho
nuuncso response to this treat
ment Is said to have been an ap
parently sincere attitude In fur
nishing tho military Informa
tion necessary for tno delicate
losk of occupying Japan. This
attitude of cooperation on the
part of tho entire Nipponese
delegation appears to be ono of
the outstanding facts ememlnii
irom, we conierence.
Main Matter
The. pressing matter of the
moment is the military occupa
tion ot japan, ana it is believed
In Manila that this will come
soon. The country Is In a state
of high tension, as Is to be ex
pected of a public which sud
denly has been confronted with
tho first-major defeat in the his
tory of the nation. Under these
circumstances the quicker we
ge.t troops Into the home islands,
the better, ' especially in view
of the fact that there are some
2,000,000 Japancso soldiers In
Japan proper and these should
oe placed under military con
trol promptly.
The Japanese, delegation In
MuiiIIh, headed by ttorn-facod
Lt. Gen, kuwudc, gave tno im
pression tluil lt really wus cugPi'
to carry out the levrmit of tha
Potsdam declaration, The con
sensus uinong American there
Il that Jiiniiii's delays In com
plying with uur requirements
liuva been due largely to Jupnii's
uiifumllliirity with Mirrvndcr
procedure and to tho terrific
shock of defeat, ralhor t nit it to
an iiltompt to 'stall,"
Formal Signing
Tho formal aluiilnu of surren
der will, of coursn, take phieo
in Jupuiioso wulurs or on tho
matnliimlr perhaps In 'Tokyo, It
se)f. 1 That won't bo long, 'do
fcrrod now Hint tho piellmln
ni'lt'it havo boon got outof the
wny, , ' ?,
In tills connection there are
unconfirmed icporl.i h a t Lt.
Gen. Wnlnwrlghl, hero of Cor
regldor, muy attend the' formal
surrender ceremonies, llo win
found safe In u Jap prison enmp
In Manchuria. It certainly would
plcuse tho American public to
see Wainwriuht receive , this
tribute, lie will go down in his
tory us onu qf the binvtisC of
tho bravo the niun wlm'-wns
Riven Die terrible usHlgiimentr of
holding an unlenublu position
as long as possible and then suf
fering tho soldier's nightmare
surrender, , -
Jttpi Surrender
Re.ilstiiiH'0 of Japan's crack
Kwitntung army In Manchuria
to the Invading Russian forces
has all but faded out. The Jnns
are surrendering almost every.
wnero wan tne result tliut the
Muscovites are runidlv occuov-
Ing this great country after less
than a fortnight of war.
So vanishes Japan's drenm of
building up great possessions on
tho continent. It wus her theft
of Miinchurlu from C h I n u in
1031 that Inaugurated tha ag
gression which swept across
Europe. Japan's success In "gut
ting away" with this- brigandage
encouraged Mussolini to under
take uggrpsslon, and this In turn
encouraged Hitler, It hai been
a long and cruel road from Man!
cliurlu, but maybe that Is fite'i
way of giving ua a permanent
peace,
Radio Programs
KFJI
Mutual-Don La
1240 ko.
Mon, Evening, Aug. 20, 1141 j
Air enteral
a I r a I a e
Qioe n. m. tladrltl
II I III.
Nana
lit! Il I n it e r
llanre
emu k u it 1 1 1 r hi
, Hand
liOtt ttvanlnf Ceu
rarl 111) J I in llolt.
N.
tillo Lane Renear
me M I i I III
Hlterlte
. Itrown
doo tiiann Hater:
Naoa
ill Mima Teal
Siaralaa
lit Jlmmr r I '
lar
ill llanee
I0:oo Na Reen
He !
Tuesday. Aug. 21, 1843
ill a. m. r'erm
lliillallna
1:00 rrank Ham
I n i w a ,
Nw
Mfi II, il Itllia
. ino Headline
Nan
Till mi, Mi Tl m
00 lavarllaa e I
Yaalardat.
ill r e It I e
II. .h..
tM Take II Kaiy
Tim a
lilt C I Iff Id.
werda
f:oe
ill
die
ill
William
I. ana, Naara
Marten
tlawnar
M e r n-l n f
alatlnae
V.M.I, Re.
vua
l a. oo
tout
10.10
10.19
HUM
11.11
rllann llardr,
N.w.
naiit.lhliia la
Talk Al.uui
M.itttinlelunt
Miniiilalit.ar.
M a r il I n i
Meladl.a
lira Jean,
nla
t: a I a n d e r
r Ma.le
Saw.
klu.le af the
Maitere
11.00 M a I e d I aua
hlatndl.a 1
lltll II e a d I I n
llanri
liiaa v
1 mi..
Hilt l aim Kt out
lion t. in. Henil
rur lau
III! J e It n I e I
ramllr
l;.lo Attar a.. I
Mll.lrale
till f e v a n e
rheri-h lieu
1:00 Heme II. ui
an.iraiian
till Van ! I a
US Halon led
liana
l.OO in. I aall H
Talliat
I 10 A I a f eak
llanre I'
Sill ri.a MeaweQ
lioorulton
Jr., New.
it
fill It a Mlllei,
Nana 1
1.90 l.ai-al Newe
T a w k
Toillr. J
111! K I a m a Ik
Hi. .11. Tlm
tiot Sam tlayaT,
N.wa I
I'll Huearman '
I 10 Tarn Mil
till NliM Nan
Wire J
WOOL SHIRTS
Plain .Blue or Checks
, 6.95 up
OREGON WOOLEN
600 Main
American Legion V-J
Installation Party
Tuesday, Aug. 21, Moore Park
Cracked Crab and all tho
Trimmings Served Family Style
Cocktail Hour 6:30, Dinner 7 p. m. sharp
MUSIC - - ENTERTAINMENT
Plates and Napkins Furnished
Bring your own tools and cups
LEGIONNAIRES AND FAMILIES ONLY
-: : X !
I 1
Mobiloil
IHI WtUliK
Surveys show that three out of four cars today need fresh oil
and certainly this is no time to neglect your car.. . -
Hot weather and wartime driving conditions make it doubly
important that you use a highly protective oil such ,
as Mobiloil.
HOW'S YOUR OIU
Drive in today at the Sign of the Flying Red Horse and have
your Independent Mobilgas dealer check your oil. Then, if it's
low or needs changing, have him protect your car for the
miles ahead with Mobiloil, World's Largest Selling Motor OIL
mm mm ni5iicx-TfDa)
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