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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1945)
1 rRAKK JENKINi MALCOLM JPLEV Editor Maneglng Ldltor k tempore n eomDInatlon of the Evenine Hereld and tha Klamath Newa. Published avcry afternoon except Sunday itltaplanade and Pine lUeaU. Klamalb Falls, Orefon. by the garaid Publlihliuj Ca and tha News Publishing Company. lniapH . itfnail ... mattar at tha DOati raiia. Ore. on Auuit 30, 1900, under acl oi eonsrees. Biarva a. lata letoftlc oi Klamath. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: PuUlda Klamath. Lake, Mod 00. SlKlyou countlee year ft to By earner -.month 750 ...year flM By mall By mall 6 monlha S3.U year 16.00 niBscRinEns ror V flit, aik for clrculaUon 'Circulation manager, correction! on t pertinent. dial Him. delivery service dial Altar JKX p. m. call Member, Associated Prase Member Audit Bureau ClrculaUon Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY A CHEERFUL thought today is that there shouldn't be any official restrictions this you on Christmas decorations, and local people can light up their winaows, yards and interiois as bright ly as the availability of light ing equipment will permit. We might even try a com munity Christmas tree, as is planned at Eugene. There seems to be a pleasing dearth of underprivileged, but we imagine the Salvation Army, the Hi-Y boys, the Elks and the fire department will be husv with their usual Christ mas programs. EPLEY For several years, there has been a shadow over Christmas. That shadow has now been lifted. Not all of those who helped lift it will be with us, but we are sure they, too, would want it to be a season of joy. So let the lights shine this year at Christmas, symbolic of the restoration of peace and of our allegiance to the principle of good will among men that is so important to the future of our world. . a a e Those Special Events Why can't we buy bonds and urge others to buy them just for the sake oi the in vestment and the aid they will be to con trolling inflation? No queens, no plaque on a plane, no variety show for your patriotism just an Investment in America's future, The University bf Oregon Emerald. That puts into words a question which no doubt has entered many a mind. War bond and Victory Loan campaigns have been a par ade of special events and publicity stunts. Citizens have been induced to buy bonds with contests, merchandise premiums, lotteries and entertainment. On the face of it, it looks like a synthetic patriotism that has to be stimulated In this manner. But wait a minute. Before we denounce our fellow citizens for seeming to require such antics to get them to buy government securities, let us reflect that all of these things are dis tinctively American as American as new model car showings, hot dogs, Saturday after noon football, Sunday school picnics. They are a part of the zestful American way of doing things. They help to make it the kind of a country it is the kind of a country that our youthful millions long for when they are away and revel in when they get home. -y v. ,; ' Maybe it isn't right. Maybe we- ought to change the country. But that's what it is now, and somehow it oversubscribed seven war loans and won a tough war. News Behind The News BY PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 The stage Mr. Truman set for the management-labor conference looked better from the back of the wings than the way you saw it out front. And better than that was the recasting the president did of the principal roles. You may have read here beforehand that John L. Lewis, who Is not only a living Hamlet but inspired the play which union labor has enacted the last few years (sit down strike, organization of CIO), was scheduled to carry a spear. He had been limited to one voto and no representation on committees. But when the curtain went up, there was Mr. Lewis, practically in center stage, less talka tive than usual and without a spotlight on him, yet visibly the unannounced star. In fact, the assigned roles were openly revised and the executive committee enlarged to give him full representation. a Lewis Called A FEW days before Mr. Truman had called Lewis into the White House. It was not only the first time Lewis had seen the inside of that august edifice for years; it had been years since he had even seen Truman, They had met when Truman was investigating war contracts as a senator. Lewis came in with other union leaders, but remained behind for a private un- reported talk. He expressed a sincere personal interest in success for the conference; made clear his belief it was time to get back to collective bargaining (in contradiction to all this nonsense of strikes, arguments, politics and chaos) and said he was ready to cooperate. This was a bonanza for Truman, in the the atrical terminology of the day. The conference was being publicly foredoomed. The dominant power was Hillman and his CIO. It was he who took the initiative in handing Lewis the spear role. His tactics arc always to fight, fight, fight especially when the time has come to make peace. Recrimination or selfish po litical advantage always seem to be guiding stars he cannot get away from and these prac tically exclude the barest possibility of peace. Lewis took hold. The first thing, with AFL's Bill Green standing by his side (Green could never handle Hillman), Lewis turned his bullet eyes, camouflaged under Karloff eyebrows, upon the follower of Mars and said matters would be handled thus and so. They practically were. The chances for final, convincing peace are hazardous, of course, but this is the way the stage was happily reset to improve them at the last minute. The first two days were steam vented with speech-making and then the op posing factions went off the front pages and into committee meetings to do the real busi ness. My information is that the agreed goals were two: A Adopt a set of new, strong principles under which labor and management can live. B To set up new machinery for collective bargaining. " a a a Principles Not Difficult THE principles should not' prove excessively difficult. The machinery is the important thing. The national labor relation and war labor boards have been farces which no one wants to play longer, except the Hillman Murray combination, which is the only one that got much out of it for itself. The idea of new labor boards, more honest, more judicial (creating a refuge where both sides can go to get justice Instead of political or high-pressure settlements) is one solution which .seems obvious to me. The railway media tion board is a pattern, which has prevented gen eral strikes in that industry for nearly 20 years. It was formed back when just such a situation as now controls labor nationally was evident In that one industry. Railway management and labor got together and wrote a law, providing cooling off periods before strikes and just mediation. This cannot be done, however, for every union in the country, say those who are in ,,timate, experts with an objective inner view of the problem. They think such a board or boards would be smothered with cases from every drugstore or laundry. The machinery, they assert, would be too cumbersome. The job of fact-finding alone would be stupendous. My own belief is that if you lay down a genuine set of . principles sufficiently genuine to get both sides honestly in favor of making them work the government will have far fewer cases than you might guess from the existing conditions. I think such a solution would achieve stabilization of the current chaos rather swiftly. A solution like that would have the greatest power in the world behind it, the knowledge and co-operation of the people in establishing right. Success or failure of the conference rests upon the degree of which this one single prin ciple is achieved. SIDE GLANCES Telling The Editor Letters printed here mart not be more than Ma ajorda In length, must be writ' ten Isglelf on ONE SIDE ot the paper only, end must be signed. Contributions fallowing these rules, are warmly war- THANKS TO MAYOR KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To the Editor) In response and answer to Magee for that won derful article he wrote in honor of our boys in blue I have been here two years with my son in blue and let me say thanks again, you are a real citizen, as you are the only one I ever heard say anything nice about our boys in Blue. "We all know the soldiers. sailors and marines all had their job to do in this dreadful war and each and everyone did it the best they could. And all of us want to say "thank you boys, one and all, soldiers, sailors, mar ines, merchant seamen, coast guard. We take our hats off to one and all. There will be an empty space now when NAS closes its gates, and the bell-bottoms are nowhere around. The little boys irom 'luieiake did one grand job too, but nothing has ever been said, but no amount of words Amazing Cement Paint LJ I BnaaTaBToaaata : Protects Buildings Against1 A 1E1 Watpr- IViW- Hum sfETaiiicr (O -vi iAra,, uuiiuoi weatner proofs at It bcaulifie. Prevents costly repair due to ravages of feather. At same rime, gives your building new, modern beauty that will lost for years. tO STUCCO, BRICK, HASOrlUV WATI1.MOOFJ FOUNDATIONS, TOO LStocks of BONDEX are. carried by . BIr Btiln Lnmher Co, Main and Spring Stt. Bulldtri Lumber C. 3074 So. Oth St. . T. W. Coprlint! Tardi 66 Main St. General Paint Corporation DID Main St. Ooeller'i Waltpiper and Paint Htore 434 Main St. Homa Lumber and Sopplj Ca aw ou ota ou I. E. r-alterson Paint Store 1220 East Main St. The Sloan Company Wholesale Only 516 Market St. Saburban Lumber Ce. 470 So. Oth St. Swan T.sbe Monldlng .-Ca. 3226 So. 8th SL Lake Cenntr Bdwe. Ce. Lakevlew, Ore. 1. W. Copelenf Yards luieiaite. ianu 1 aiai ev 1, Cain, aw could express my appreciation for what they did. Please, town-folks, if ever we do face another awful war (God grant we don't), please don't raise only one banner. Keep them all flying. And bring out to the public eye more MEN like Magee. God bless him and those like him. (Signed) A mother, Olga Riley. ALBANY, Nov. 14 (P) A farm planning conference will be held here January 29, with agricultural experts and Linn ctunty farmers attending. 1 ju. ..x: 1 nrsv y&Z EVA . XXJ. -JIVAe- eTviAVV -73 ccaax testy isnaawice;. ate T, n sra. uswr. err. "Yes, Tni hurrying right down fown thnt handsome young Dr. Brown is back home, the one I've been saving my symptoms for!" The World Today By DeWITT MacKENZIE AP Foreign Affairs Analyst MacKENZIE Yesterday was a real Anglo- American day, what with Prime Minister Attlee s address to con gress and the agreement be tween Wash ington and London to join hands in a committee of incmiry to deal with the prob lem of the Jewish nation al home in Palestine. Of course this doesn't n e c e s s a rily Dresaee agree ment either in the matter of Pal estine, or concerning the affairs in which Mr. Attlee is mainly in terested at the moment the atomic bomb and that big loan to England. Still, it's a heartening exhibition of international amity and willingness to cooperate. Attlee s lob. I takn It wna largely one of salesmanship. He wanted to convince America that mere s no threat to our interest in England's new socialist gov ernment with its nationalization program, and that a loan is jus tifiable. As to the loan, he will find two schools of thought in this country, but probably most people will agree with one strik ing statement which is calcu lated to nrovide a basi.e fnr world cooperation. It is this: Increasing Friendship "I look forward to an pro of increasing cooperation and friendshia between the ITS A mH Great Britain not as an exclu sive friendship but as a contribu tion to the knitting together with all peoples through the United Nations organization in the bonds of peace. "In our internal nollcl purr. will follow the course decided by the peoples' will. You will see us (Britain) embarking on nroi ects of nationalization. . . We shall be working out a planned economy. You, it may be, will continue in your more individ ualistic methods. It is more im portant that- we should under. stand each other and other na tions whose institutions differ from our own. It is essential if we are to build ud a neaceful world that we should have the widest toleration, recognizing mat our aim is noi umiormitv but unity in diversity. It would be a dull world if we were all alike." That's a thesis which seekers BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN WSlfoudHf'P'icdi BREAD IS AT ITS BEST when irs23W?tf BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN IPS "TttvutCH? pXC BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN TS7KotHbt$'?C4& BREAD IS AT ITS BEST when xrs'tfUnMiHt'Pnedl BREAD IS AT ITS BEST when irs23W??W BREAD IS AT ITS BEST Aw r too... AND Utamath hi!!i!i;i!l!ll!!!! i!!lli!!!ll:"!!l ;lii Ml l: 'U , H'l ' 'MM' 'I i I'll ! w!;hl,tiile.:i:4Clyr IP on From the Klamath Republican Novembor 18, 1803 I, A. Duffy will head n coyote hunt to liour island Sunday, There Is a lono coyote on the Is lutitl. About 100 dogs will bo used in tho hunt. a a a The Klamath Fulls Light unit Power company's now plant, built at a cost of improxlmntuly $35,000 on Link rlvor, will go into operation next week, a a a From the Klamath Horald Novombor 14, 183S Circuit Judge liny of Lake view today quashed an indict ment returned by the county grand Jury against County Judge Gcorgo Grizzle churning larceny. Judge liny held thnt Circuit Judge Ashurst's action In con nection with the indictments hud been prejudicial and Invad ed tho province of the grand jury. a a e Cnnby Cross lodge, A. P, and A. M., Tuloluke, was instituted this week. after peace can support. 'It means that America and any j other nations which wish to our- i sue a policy of Individual enter- prise can do so and still be able I in mnn.nl. wltK nAiint.ln. I which prefer nationalization and perhaps regimentation of the in dividual. A nation doesn't have to accept or even endorse the fiolitlcalism of another country n order to be friendly. The Chinese and Japanese use masks instead of make-up in the theatre. Hospital Expense Coverage For You and Your Family Wednesday, Not. 14, 1948 . HEflALD AND NEW8 roUlt ( SEATTLE, Nov. 14 (fP) A 28-year-old man and his wlfo were hold on 1111 open charge today after Detective Captain Itlchnrd Mahoncy snid the man confessed to tho slaying 'three weeks ago of Sam Kntx, 7t)-ycnr-old clothing merchant. Two other men whom tho couple named us participants In tho robbery-alnylng were also un der arrest, Mnlioney said. Tho detective said thnt tho mnn confessed ho hit Kntz twlco with an axe, and one of thu other men stubbed the victim "aovoral times" In the tluont. lit u confession which police said wuit taken down In sliorU liniul, the niun's- wife, suld site went to tho storo where Kutfl lived In n buck room, and after period of conversation with Kali, admitted the other three for the pre-pluiinud rolilmry, Kutz never lucked the doors of his cstubllnlimviit. ills body whs found tlio morning of Oc tober 211. Wolr For WESTINGHOUSE Horry Hafter Furniture Ri4io poiroms KFJI Mutual-Don Lee 1240 ke. Wednesday Eve. d.oe p. 11 Nov. 14, 194S Gabriel tea iter. newa :15 Dlsstt Danee :1S S a a 1 1 1 1 I Bante ! II a w a 1 1 a a Meile 7:1A llarrr Bar lick Sales Lane Nearer S ee Mala Lin. IM link- Shear a Oleno Uerdr. Niei tl( a. a Millar 9M Sheet the Work. I I I I I I I E. L. Putnam H. I. McKim leree News oene'. Bp A Ma.lo That Spark I.. 10:U Orrmo K.r-erl.s Thursday, Nov. IS :M e. VFake BB Tease f :a Farm Battalias 1.ee Frank II. m. I n w a 7. News T:ls Smile Tleae liM B a a 4 1 1 a a News Best Bare S:0a rararlt.e a f Tasl.rdar :IS Pepaler Bits :.la News I II rutin Flashes : W I I I I a m Lane, Ntws :IS M a r I a a Dewner :M Hernial Matinee :tl Variety a- Tela 4 Ol.no Barij, lilts Same thine I k t Abaat ISJI s t e n e ante U:U Kornlnf Mel. eeies enf 11:0 Olek ill Jsannle 11:11 Tanas tar Tao lliM Queen tmt A Dar U:e M el e 4 I eas M a I a- ai.s 11:11 R a Nawi 13:30 Tear Danee Tenee tt:4S Farm Franl Sllne 1:00 p. m, iterrr Horllck S a- Ion v 1:15 J 1 1 in Famllr 1:JS After neea Ceaoert 144 Masla That Sparkles l:l Tel Flak km 1:11 L.c.l News . a a 4 t 1 Teplee (.- nun at Bast M Zlaa Lather. an Cberrh StSS Blea Maxwell S.-eS Fallen Lewis Jr., New. 4:11 Res Miller, News 43 E r s k I a a Johnson 4:41 K I a math Th.atrs Tims S.M Conner Mus ical. I:ts Sapsrraan (:SS Caps. MI4 nlfbl (:5 Tarn Ml YOUH aimisBNTiNo ma MUTUAL BENEFIT Health & Accident Ass'n. at Omaha lit IS. Itk Fhaae mi E- ' i i Jj i 1 Jl J i US aiBI aaa ( - J enrffl that TAIJiKD ABOUT IT BEGINS TONIGHT A Spiritual Awakening Crusade LJaKlj AT THI FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ' North 8th and Washington Sts. 7:45 p.m. Dolly A great gospel long' torvlc 8: IS p. m. A stirring gospel menage 7:15 p.m. A pre-revlvol prayer meeting ' Rev. S. L. Tidwell, Speaker Pastor Trinity Baptist Church Vancouver. Wash. Ex-Chaplain la U. S. Army DYNAMIC INTERESTING INSPIRING Hear this man at tho First Baptist church, N. 8th and Washington Services Begin at 7:45 p. m. Her. S. L. Tidwell Step right up, amigos . . . Have a Coca-Cola ,t,Yank friendliness comes back to Leyte Naturally Filipinos thrilled when their Yankee comrades came back to the Philippines.' For along with freedom they brought back all the friendliness that America stands for. You find it quickly expressed in the simple phrase Have a Cohf. There's no easier way to say Relax And be yourself. Everywhere the pause that refreshes with ice-cold Coca-Cola has become a symbol of how Yankee friendliness follows the flag around the globe, SOTTLIO UNDEI AUTHOIIIY Of THE COCA-COtA COMPANY IV COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS 665 Spring St. Phone 8632 Hear Morton Downey KFJI 9:19 A, M. I 1 "Coca-Cola" and Its sbbrsvfslloi. Coke" ar tha rsflstersd trade, marks which distinguish tha prod uct of Tha Coca-Cola Company. glim PASTRIES MOI'UTheC-CC.