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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1945)
rOUH HERALD AND NEWS Frank jenkins Editor Managing Editor a 4mMrar combination of tha Evenma Herald at W ia math Nowi Published avcrv afternoon xcot Sunday at Esplanade and Pina itreeU. Klamath Falli. Oregon, by III Herald PublUhlng Co. and Uia New PublUbing Company, , tn tared aa eecond elasa matter at the poi tor flee ol Klamatli rail, Or., on Auut 20. tOOfl, under act ol eongraaa. March. 187ft SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Outride Klamatb. Lake, Modoo. SttKljrou countlea -year 7.00 By carrier mnnih 750 By mall month 3.33 By carrier V" 9XM By mail yr 96 00 SUBSCRIBERS For correctioni en BUI, aik tor circulation rparunent circulation manager, dial 7409. . Member. AaaodaUd Preu Today's Roundup BY MALCOLM EPLEY COMMENTING on our recent discussion o highway No. 97 sifins in this area, the Eugene Register-Guard mentions the need for a good, official sign at the weed, Calif., junction of No. 97 and No. 99. The purpose would be to give northbound travelers a true mileage and geographical picture of the alternate routes to Portland available to them at that point. We agree en thusiastically. The Register-Guard suggests a sign reading like this: ALTERNATE ROUTES To Portland U. S. 99 Pacific highway Tia Yreka, Ashland. Madford. Roieburg and Eugene. U. S. 97-Ora. 58-JJ. S. 99... ! ria Klamath Falls. Chemult, Oakridge, Eugene. via Klamath Falls, Chtmult, Bend. Madras. Wapinitia and Mount Hood. !i This wording is a bit haywire, of course, ! because the mileage varies on the two No. 97 ".' alternatives listed. Furthermore, still another state highway is involved in the route given V. through Bend Oregon 50. All of which goes to show the confusion in numbering and in highway combinations which :. Is a handicap to the routes through here. Al ii though the route by Nos. 97-58-99 to Portland !! from Weed is shorter and faster than by No. 99. !! it has a, lack of numbering continuity that is ii likely to confuse and discourage the stranger, ; even though he would be glad to take a shorter and faster route if he knew about it. .t The Register-Guard makes a wise suggestion ; for an outline map of the alternates right li along with the mileage signs. That would help. !? Oregon Signs !; "THIS proposed sign location Is In California, and this particular matter must be taken up with the California highway authorities. " But that does not relieve the Oregon highway l commission of responsibility, for the shortcom ; lugs of signs along No. 97 Inside the state of ;j Oregon, and that is the thing we have been ;s talking about in this column for some time. ;i Major signs on No. 97 south of Chemult should '' include distances to Eugene, Salem and Port i: land by the Willamette highway (No. 58). They should retain, of course,, the presently noted it distances to Bend, Crater Lake and The Dalles. :; We haven't found an official highway sign in Klamath Falls area that points north to Port : land on No. 97, not to speak of Eugene and :c .Salem. We invite the attention of the Register-Guard z not merely to the situation at the Weed, Calif., i junction, but also to the inadequacy of the i signs on No. 97 IN OREGON. Agreeing that SERVICE TO THE TRAVELER is the major objective, we contend that service to the I traveler calls for proper official signing show ing definitely the alternate routes available to ; motorists at Weed and Goshen, and signs along i No. 97 south of Chemult showing a motorist I that he can go north on that route to Eugene, ; Salem and Portland. News Behind The News BY PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 The first studied picture of 'how things were run inside the madhouse of the nazi state has been ob tained by our intelligence people from cap tured leaders. This clears much of the foolishness glibly aired by Hitler officers in their interviews with Flashes of Life BIG WELCOME SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 24 (fr) The surprise was on the air corps lieutenant and his com panion who sneaked into a base ment garage and proceeded to break the door lock leading in to the owner's house. City Judge Joseph J. Jeppson, owner, turned on the lights and greeted them The two departed quietly and in different directions but the lieutenant was soon captured by the police and is now telling his story to the MP's. "WHO DONE IT?" PORTLAND, Oct. 24 (IP) A precinct police sergeant called tonight for one of his patrolmen to confess and endure embar rassment for the honor of the force. A false alarm sent firemen next door rushing to their hose ana ladder trticK. Motors roared and the big doors swung open but in the middle of the driveway was a parked car. GOOD HEALTH Your Grocrrott Possession Aitrirla H kr btlne rtlltTid el fl.mtmhoidi (Hill), Fu ture, Flatula, Htmla IRup tun). Our method of frtat ratnt without hospital op eration iucmmIuIIv utd lor 33 roan, Llboral eridlt lorrai. Call lor AXarainatlon e oend lot FREE booklet. Open fWnjr, Mon., Wed., frl v 7 to Silt Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC Myalclan and Surgeon J. S. Cor. E. Burmtdo end Orand Ave. Telephone EJUt 3918, Portland 14, Oroaoa MALCOLM BPLCY I Editor eraid and th delivery aervlc dial After 7:00 p. ra. c&U Member Audit Bureau Circulation EPLEY milt. Grants Pass. . miles. Police hurriedly pushed it aside, one reached for his ticket book and then discovered it was a patrol car. DARK MOMENT MODESTO, Calif., Oct. 24 (IP) Being locked in a psychopathic ward holds no fascination for Deputy Sheriff Cope Hartley of Stanislaus county. The acciden tal imprisonment gave him some bad moments. . . . Passing attendants who heard his cries of "Let me out, I'm a deputy sheriff," smiled indul gently. Finally, however, he got someone to believe him. TAIL BLAZER ALBANY, Ore., Oct. 24 (VP) Curiosity killed the squirrel and blacked out Albany's light and water system. An over-inquisitive graydig ger mounted a power company pole and started to cross from one 2,000-volt wire to another. The short cut off lights for sev eral minutes and halted the electrically-operated water sys tem. The squirrel died. Our rent control will be just as tough as it ever has been, and maybe a little tougher. Leo F, Gentner, acting OPA regional administrator, New York. Ult thlt modem vioor mathaa thit fcrlnn rallal from the ipliml ol Bronchial Althrat. Full riiund II not aitlifiid. CAUTION Uuonlriiilttclti. r Widnaiday. Oct. 24. 1943 news reporters or at all accounting, the state ment of one Dr. Schacht does. Schacht was the only high German who had an intelligent mind. It was he who contrived the clever financial and economic subterfuges by which Hitler built a bankrupt state into a world threat in a few years. He U Dr. HJalmer Horace Greeley (imagine that old American journalistic middle name) Schacht He quit Berlin when the arms expenditures started go ing mad at Hitler's direction, and was found interned by our invading armies. His opinion of top nazis: Hitler: "I would not believe Hitler dead if he told me so himself." , Herman Goering, the fat right-hand man of Hitler: "A fool, a coward and always a liar. He was in all things ignorant, and a charlatan." Goebbels, the propagandist: "A terrible liar but the best brain in the government, as well as a most courageous man." Himmler, who handled the discipline through secret police, purges and terror: "A dreadful, horrible man." Thyssen, who financed Hitler into power and then broke with him when the pogrom started: "A weakling of inherited wealth." (Thyssen in cidentally was captured by Hitler in the occu pation of Paris in 1940 and was kept in a con centration camp, where our people found him a very old and frail man). .., Gives The Goods SCHACHT, I think, gives the goods on the nari leaders more honestly and accurately than any other one. Of the limitations of Hit ler's mind, he says der fuehrer never realized the war was lost, although the others realized it a year or more before the end. - Hitler never dared hold a cabinet meeting after 1938 because those with intelligence in his own group constantly opposed his wild planning. General Udet, for one instance, dared express opposition merely to the Goering shortsighted air policy, and after correctly pre dicting Goering would lose German air super iority by 1944, shot himself. They were all very ordinary men, less than average in acumen and warped bitterly and egotistically. The only- way they could keep themselves in power to work their mad destiny was by crushing all common sense and stilling any voice of reason. Not one in character, fore sight or any genuine virtue, could compare with the great men of history. From Schacht also comes the first clear pic ture of secret German finance, the bookkeeping magic by which the nazis defied arithmetic for a time. He says Hitler started really arm ing for the war first in 1937 and 1938 when his budgets contained three billion marks (both years) for armaments. This was at the time when Mr. Roosevelt was submitting amiable plans for world peace and thinking the removal of trade barriers would do it." The Swiss quotation on the mark then was around three cents, which would mean the an nual arms budget was around $90,000,000 in our currency two-fifths of which went for the air force then, as thereafter, until the end of the war. The money was raised by bond issues bearing 3 H per cent interest and the banks were required to take them. Protested To Hitler SCHACHT protested to Hitler in 1938 that the system he had set up to beat bankruptcy could not stand such expenditures, and after a couple, of scenes with Hitler, he quit. The amount of currency outstanding then was only eight billion marks, but, thereafter Hitler in flated it 10 times to 80,000,000,000 marks. The debt when Schacht left was around 60 billion marks and Hitler ran it up to 450 billions at the war's end, quintupling it. This would seem to make the nazi war cost around 430 billion marks, of which about 70 billions was raised by Inflation, and 360 billion by seizing the savings and working money of citizens through bond issues imposed on the banks. . At a three centmark, the cost could be computed roughly at somewhere around $12, 900,000,000, a drop in the bucket of our cost, which has increased the debt from about $250,000,000,000, without considering tax re ceipts which reached $45,000,000,000 last year. Of course Hitler was not required to finance the world, and gave little aid even to his ally, Italy. The lesson which can be learned from the sound Schacht evidence is twofold: (A) Nazidom shows what defective mentali ties can do when they attain absolute power and exclude reason. (B) You cannot long cheat arithmetic even in a controlled state. General Smith Will Be Navy Day Speaker PORTLAND, Oct. 24 IP) Lt. Gen. Jonathon Wainwrlght, de fender of Bataan and Corregi dor, will speak here following a noon hour parade in his honor November 16, the Oregon war finance committee reported to day. General Wainwright will be here in behalf of the Victory Loan drive on a western tour that Includes a visit to his birth place at Walla Walla, Wash. The marine fighter pilot ace, Lt. Col. Gregory "Pappy" Boy ington, will also make a Victory Loan drive appearance here November 5. The men's clothing industry undoubtedly can look forward to a rather long period of unprece dented activity. Jerome I. Udell, clothing manufacturer. RESINOi. FLAT ROOFS Applied by Experts Fully Guaranteed We have asbestos asphalt, mineral surface felts, static and aluminum coatings. . FREE ESTIMATES Grems Roofing Service SIDE GLANCES t tew iv ni owviot. we. j: n Ma b. a, ear. "Well, if the broken dishes wojjca, i ougni Telling The Editor utttre printed ken nnt net be mere then M wordo In Itrutlh, mutt be writ In Iwbli on ONI IIOI el the paper only, and mutt be Htned, Centrlbullena following trtew ruler, ere verml wet- "STRIKES' KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. (To the Editor): I would like to ask employers if they ever raised wages voluntarily? They must be making good money, espe cially the lumber companies. No. i common lumber la 1933 sold for about $10 per M. I know, i cunt a house then What is it now? Five or six times as much and a lower erad' ing at that. At a congressional investigation Patrick M. Mc Donough, head of McDonough steel company, Oakland. Calif . stated that his firm had made at least one million dollars year during the war. He said that was too much. If other big concerns confessed, undoubted ly they could say the same thing, There are two sides to every question. Strikes are deplorable and should te regulated. Both employer and employee should be forced to settle ay arbitra tion. Unreasonable increase in wag es, produces inflation. We have it to some extent right now. What is the matter with cut ting in on excess profits to be used as taxes to Keep down gov ernment expenses? I believe in a good living wage: but the un ions do not consider the white collar worker and others who get no benefit or raise when there Is a strike. Unions are a good thing, but should be regu lated. I am not like several CIO members I have talked with, that thev want and are going to take ail the profits, and give the operator only a supervisor s salary. I asked, what about the capital invested? They say that was acquired by exploiting la bor and belongs to labor. On the other hand some em ployers say labor is getting more than they need; that the laborer is wasting his 'wages. They -do not take into consideration that a wage earner should have enough for a home, old age and insurance. Maybe the employee is wast ing his wages, that is his own business. Maybe he would be willing when he is old to live on a measley pension. It is only enough to keep the wolf from the door. One better be shot. To show I am fair to the un ions. I will state I think the coal miners had cause for com- ?ilaint. War workers were get inz much more waees for easier work. Coal mining is a semi skilled, hard work. I am begin ning to think John L. Lewis' is a pretty good man, he only wants fair play. As Paul Mallon said in the Herald and News, October 19, "This labor proposition may bring on bad inflation." Then what will happen to many old folks who have worked hard and saved enough for their old age7 Their money will not keep them and as I said, old age pension is only a pittance. This labor and employer con troversy is a hard nut to crack. ' We sure do not want commun- 6lVe - ' a. Your Feet Air Ice-Mint Treat Bwnini Ceilou-P Sprin In i" J Don't rooen "LtSKSE Fl ?(.. thtm en leei-Mltw Bent. r' M ortlnr, loothlnit eeoln JMjt'&Un.M. fns out ry r"l'ien'; herd old Bub I.MInt or Xi,Sed. B e how eorni end '?UM Kjffiitlnt brlpi ottt amount to more than rny to nave a raise i ism, but Inflation would bring it on. I fear we are approaching it." (Signed) DR. M. P. TABER, 4060 Shasta Way. OKINAWA BLUES OKINAWA (To the Editor): "This it the feeling of alt th men in my outlltl" While the war .was going strong, our photographic labor atory was going all out to do there part, Two twelve hour shifts with no dates to look to wards easeing upl Just a grind of work and more work. Then the end of the war, Eight hour days, Sundays off. "Two Typoons'f (LUCKY US) I have had twenty two months sea duty, A wife and two Daugh ters I havent seen for sixteen months, All in all (Fourty One) points, And no hopes of getting out for five more months! Hav'ent we done our part the Reserves (NAVY) Duration and six months? What man at what desk thought of that? And the same man, Whats he dreaming up now? Lets stop dreaming and STRIK ING back home. Unless the striking is to get the boys home! Le ts do the dreaming in front of a wonderful fireplace at home!!! "OKINAWA BLUES" Please print this before I get my twenty years duty and pen sion off. A. W. JOHNSON. Eugene Man Elected NAM Vice President CHICAGO, Oct. 24 (P) C. V. Charters of Brampton, Ont., to day was elected president of Newspaper Association Mana gers, Inc., international associa tion of executives of 34 state, regional and national newspaper associations, at the group's final session of its annual meeting. Charters, who is secretary of the Canadian Weekly Press asso ciation, succeeds J. Howard Rus co of 1 Hpeka, Kas.. and the Kan sas Press association. Carl Webb of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers associa tion, Eugene, was elected vice president and Nancy Mahood of the Nebraska Press association, Lincoln, was reelected secretary treasurer. Albany Troubled With Labor Surplus ALBANY, Oct. 24 (IP) Al bany has a labor surplus now, after three years of shortage. The U. S. Employment Service said its main difficulty was plac ing the increasing numbers of returning servicemen. Twenty veterans arc now awaiting place ment, and the number of service men is growing faster than jobs. The USES added, however, that the job-hunting situation is far from acute. VETERANS! A handbook of valuable information is ready for you. Drop in, or call and we'll mall you a copy. YOUR EEPBfSP.NTINO TBS EQUITABLE LIFE Assurance Society Troy V. Cook POTATOES Office 204 Williams Bldg. Phone 4803-9 a.m.-5 p.m Night Phone 3284 The World Today Br DtWITT MacKENZIE Associated Prtii War Analyst VftAAAAllrtl'tlrltlfl' eeeerieeeeitr1 Thcro's this to bo snld of Rus sia, and wo shall bo smart to note it well: When tho Muscovltos have determined on u major ob jective, they drive hond-on for it. That charac teristic is il lustrated in the soviet ac tion in propos ing to con clude unilat eral trade parts with tho uxis satellites Hungury, Ro mania and Bul garia a move Mackenzie which Britain and the United States have pro tested as violating tho spirit of tho Yalta agreement for concert ed policies among the Big Three. The significance of this develop ment scorns clmir enough, and It supports the thesis advanced in tills column long ago: Moscow has luid out for Its sphere of lnlluouco virtually tha wnolo of eastern and comrul Eu rope up to the lint) miming from the great German port of Stottln on the Baltic right down to the Adrlutlc. Just hike a look at your maps. Within this zone Is the new Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, Finland and the Bulkuns, with tho possible exception of Greece and Turkey, whoso status remains to bo seen. Vast Territory Tho soviet Is determinedly consolidating this vast territory. Now this isn't a new phenome non. As this writer has men tioned in previous articles, Rus sia Is taking over the Hltleriun sphere of Influence. Germuny's strength was politico-economic, backed by military power. Mos cow's strength lies in similar factors. Much of tho relch's pre-war domination was due to the eco nomic hold which it exercised over that whole area. Indeed, broadly speaking, this was Ger many's main strength. Tho smaller countries in question were economically dependent on the rolch. Take Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria since these are the countries in tho llme-llght: more than SO per cent of all their ex ports were absorbed by Ger many. And they had no alterna tive markets! There's a situation for you no alternative markets. Position Bummed Up The position was crisply summed up for me In Budapest just before the war by a famous Hungarian statesman. We werel chatting in his study and, after calling attention to the fact that more than half Hungary's ex ports went to Germany and that there were no other markets, he added: "All Hitler would have to do would be to cut off our exports to Germany for six months and we would be bankrupt. Do you think we arc going to play along with him? The answer is 'yes'. So Russian trade Is rushing into the vacuum caused by Ger many's disappearance. Time alone will tell whether this new economic set-up will be as effec tive as the old one, Germany could make lt work because of the fact that she was a great in dustrial nation and could meet the needs of the smaller coun tries for manufactured goods, while at the same time absorb ing their agricultural products. It would seem that Russia will have to balance the economic situation in similar fashion, Be that as may, meantime Moscow daily is tightening the lines in its new zone of Influ ence. And that zone, of course, is extending in other directions Into the Mediterranean and Middle East. Then there's an other great soviet sphere being created In the Far East, President Truman la moving to abolish the various war agen cies. The best place for them to go is right back into the alpha bet. Poor Digestion? Headachy? on Sour or Upset? Tired-Listless? Do you fct huudachy and upnot duo to poorly dlgeaUHl food? To fool ehoorful and happy again your food must be dlrer-tod properly. Each day, Nature mint produce about two pints of a vital dlgoatlve juiro to help digest your food. If Nature falls, your food may remain undlteeted leaving you headachy and irritahls. Therefore, you muat lncreaee tho flow of this dlKcaflvo juice. Carter's Little Llvor Pllla Incroaes this flow quickly often In as little as 80 minutes. And, you're on tho road to feeling better. Don't depend on artificial olds to counteract Indlgcation when Carter's Little Llvor Pilla aid dlgeatlon after Na ture's own order. Take Carter's Little 1 Wfr Pi"i f i riirectod. Got thorn at a" Farmers Attention! VV kill, droit 0nd chill your hogi e par pound. Wo euro and imoko your ham and bacon -8c par , pound. Wo havo tho beit facllitloi. Our work II guaran teed. WHY PAY MORE? JOHNSON PACKING CO. THE HOME OF QUALITY 1 TO HAVE E SALEM. Oct. 24 (P) Wllllnm ette university announced today It would have eight now faculty members when Its now semester onmm tomorrow. Thuy are Dr. Carl L. Folkorts, Chlenuo. to head the business ad ministration department: Circuit Jrnigo E. M, Putin, Dean Ellis and Robert DeArmond, all of Sulem, to teach in tho law school; Airron Keller, Portland, violin Instruct or; Esther Mlllor, Chicago, voice instructor; Esther uiausen, nil not. N. D.. to aerve as asslstunt li brarian, and Mrs, Jennie C. Nea- sotli, women's physical education instructor, Oil Lleser, Seattle, former otlv lotio publicity director of Wll lamotte, has returned from the navy to fill the newly-created )ou or director of publicity. PULLMAN, Wash., Oct. 84 (IP) If magnesium and aluminum can be produced cheaply onouith they will In many products take the placo of wood, engineers and technical experts told the clon ing session of the two-day light metals clinic here yr.itcrdny. Manufacturers contended that many articles in which light me tals could bo effectively u.ied were hiimpcrod by the big problem of price. Light metals uses were fore scon In such varied products as roofing, w o m e n's compacts, household appliances, machine tools and motor casings. Aluminum nlrcndv has proved Itself In items like shovels, milk cans, tennis rackets, and mat tresses, they snld, Purnoso of the two-day clinic was the passing on to various manufacturers of Information on new uses for metals In indus try. Fifty Mexicans En Route Home HILLSBORO, Ore., Oct. 24 (IP) Fifty Moxlcans who re fused to pick walnuts at the la bor commlsslon-set rate of a cent a pound were en route to their native land today. Tho men declared they would rather return home than work for prevailing rates. The other hundred-odd Mexicans who struck a week ago In demand of $1 an hour or 3 cents a pound returned to work. About 12 men have disap peared from tho labor camp, presumably to seek higher-paid jobs elsewhora. NEEDLEWORK LOVERS For the reader desiring the ad dress of a nocdlocraft magazine, Mrs. L, K. L., Minnesota, writes: "I'm sure the needlework lover would like Aunt Ellen's WORK BASKET. This monthly pattern and direction service brines tha latest creations in handicraft and needlework from tha coun try's foremost artists and de signers, It is $1.00 a year for twelve issues, but no samples are sent becauso each issuo con tains large hot iron transfer patterns as well as Ideas for such items as dollies, edgings, bedspreads, tablecloths, hats, bags, and baby's things. Orders should be sent to the WORK BASKET, 24S5 WcBtport Sta tion, Kansas City 2, Mo." If you are not delightfully pleased with the first issuo, Aunt Ellen will return your dollar and you may keep the material you hove received without any obligation. Adv. Make Reservations NOW for Frozen Food Lockers Including a limited number of 24 cu. ft. sixe it Convenient Downtown Location! it Complete Locker Service Killing, Cutting, Wrapping You Won't Nad to Touch Itl AVAILABLE SOON Sign Up Now Gat Your Pick of Locker Location! FRANK LOWELL Phono 7023 MEATS Forest Land Tax Problem Studied SALEM, Oct, 24 (II Stale Tux Conunlnslnner Coo A, Me. Kenns said today ho lind asked Gnorgo 11. Cloodi'lcli, lax cotmnls alon attorney, to study the ng old problem; of gutting tho futl oral government to pay tuxan on forest lands which tiro being 1okccI by logging companies, McKennu imkoil Goodrich to prepare luglslutlon to bo submit ted to tha 1(147 legislature, ul though ho did not oxpluln how the leulnliituro could force tha fotloriil govuriunoiit to pay tuxes. State Supreme Court Upholds Divorce SALEM, Oct, 24 (!) Tin stato supremo court uphold to day tho Washington county ell varce granted to Helen J, Hpntli, who charged hnr hunbantl, En nest R, Spath, with enmity and Inhuman treatment, Spath ap pealed, Tho high court's decision, by Justlco J. O. Ilnllcy, upheld Cir cuit J ud(io R, Friink I'ctart. Radio Vranrams lE Mutual-Don Lee Wedneiday Evo. iM m. m. 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