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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1946)
: FRANK JKNKINS MALCOLM EPLEV Editor t Managing Editor Cconiol Ida lion of Uit Evenlnf Harald and tha Klamath iwi, Publiihad tvary afternoon except Sunday at Eepla bad and Pin treete, Klamath Falls, Oregon, by tha Herald PublUhlng Co. and tha Newe PublUhing Company. filtered aa aaeond claaa matter at tha poatoffice of Klamath alia. Or., on Auguat 20, lSOfl, under act of congrew, . March I, 1870 By carrier Br mall SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ...month 11.00 By mall , ..month 91.00 By mall ... ...6 months 94. SO .year $8.00 and woman sees no hope of a 30 per cent wage Increase or greater postwar considerations for tholr wants, but sees only news of union de mands beyond their own hopes and strikes which inconvenience them and ignore their in terests (strikes against their getting autos, re frigerators, radios; strikes in public service monopolies such as telephones and telegraph.) Cause Of Strikers Hurt UT as I say, this feeling is latent and covered SIDE GLANCES B Member, Aaaoclated Preaa Member Audit Bureau ClreulaUom EPLEY r. Today's Roundup Bf MALCOLM EPLEY BECAUSE Klamath farmers dispose of their major cash crop through the winter period, it is difficult at the end of the calendar year to get an exact figure on the total agricultural income for the 12-month period. County Agent C. A. Hender son, whose estimates on this matter have always been ex ceptionally accurate, suggests the probability that the agri cultural return for the basin may be down about $2,000, 000 from the all-time high set last year (1944). That indicates something close to $23,000,000. The 1944 figure was $24,816,000. The decrease may be attributed in part to a probable decline in the size of the potato crop. Spuds took a spring beating from rainy weather, and the yield in volume is evidently not up to 1944, despite the fact that planted acreage hit an all-time high. If we agree that $23,000,000 just about hit the mark for the 1945 farm year, it still is a remarkable return for the Klamath area, which , despite its vast size has a relatively small and concentrated crop section. We will wait with Interest Mr. Henderson's final estimates and breakdown, which should be coming along in few weeks. Lumber KLAMATH'S lumbering sales value will prob libly also show a decline in 1945, due in part -to two protracted strikes that hit pro- i ducUon badly in the last half of the year. The best figure we have on 1944 lumber value is $33,200,000, worked out by W. E. Lamm, Modoc Point lumberman. Agricultural and lumbering returns appear likely to approach a balance in the near future, . and it is possible crop and livestock values may go phead of lumbering in the not-too-distant futui e. A lot depends on whether the excess " lumber values from re-manufacturing show" the : Increases that have been hoped. That excess value in 1944, according to Mr. Lamm's de ductions, was $2,000,000. At any rate, it is evident that the combined lumber-agricultural return for 1945 hit a total of $50,000,000 or over. News Behind The News ' Br PAUL MALLON CHICAGO, Jan. 9 President Truman is losing popularity with the hundreds of people with whom I talked during a 10-day trip through the north central states but not for the reasons hotly discussed in Washington, not upon the issues of his battle with congress. The average man and woman are not con cerned much today with the discussions of the high pressure groups. No one I saw mentioned the full employment spending proposal, boost ing employment compensation, fair employment practises or the other bills before congress. Indeed, few brought up the subject of strikes which are all over the front pages. If you mention the walkouts first, you will find most people bitter and wanting to go much further than Mr. Truman to curb them. But the portion of the public I was able to consult has an interesting and new attitude about the union campaign. You might call it a seething but suppressed resentment, based on factor the union strategists apparently have not considered, namely, that the average man public got accustomed to being kicked around and also by a hangover desire from the war to be cheerful in the face of all inconvenience, without any real knowledge of the justice or injustice of union claims. This Is definitely hurtine the cause of the strikers. But it is only a secondary phase in basic cause of public dissatisfaction, which is founded upon visible evidence all too intimate to every citizen, yet not to the president, his high of ficials or those who may ride in special planes and live their lives exclusive of normal condi tions of living which beset the average citizens. Observable facts are simply these: This country has not recovered from the war-time demoralization of goods ana services. The public is being pushed around now nore than during the war. Complications and diffi culties of living have greatly worsened in the last eieht months since the end in Europe. People cannot get any of the things they want whether butter, Christmas presents, clothes, cleaning, proper service in any line, including transportation. You 'can understand the general condition in the experience one business man related con cerning: his business travels. He bought i drawing room from Washington to Chicago, but before he picked it up, It was sold by a ticket clerk who told him the room was for wounded soldiers, and he would have to take lowers. On the train there was not only no wounded soldiers in his drawing room, but none on the entire train. His associates reminded him the bootlegging of train reservations makes drawing rooms worth $25 bribes. But leaving Washington, he found not even his lower available. He had to rue one sixm of his trip in a day coach, pile out in the cold to another train to get his lower. Of this he did not complain. No Refund Offered HIS point of complaint was that the railroad did not offer him or any of the possibly 200 passengers the refund due them, not only for failure to supply Pullman but for the dif ference in basic fare due to the coach ride. So also with food. The diner was out of nearly everything on the menu for breakfast except eggs, but the price of the breakfast was not reduced. The coffee served was cold; the service poor; customer resentment so high few tips were left. The train was seven hours late at Chicago, which was a daily circumstance. I found many trains run from three to eight hours late as a custom, established for months and apparently to continue Indefinitely. This one generally averages about four hours behind schedule each day. Few connections are ever made, adding to the chaos, because neither hotels nor train reservations are avauaoie. Pontile 1am uo. sleerjine and eating in railroad stations, fighting for chances to get on the first train, fill the aisles, sit on seats, stand in lines for diners which may serve cold food because their steam table is broken down. T Rat un all nleht. until 4 a. m. for a train, which the porter told me was always that late (although the company erroneously Kepi report ing it only a little late to keep you in the station.) "No one can tell when it will come through you will just have to stay here and get it when it arrives," a station manager told me. The historic demoralization of train service in Europe never reached these proportions. Com mon sad joke in the smoking rooms, which Mr. Truman should hear, was: "Well, they say Mussolini at least made the trains run on time. Onlv exnlanation of porters was: "It seems to me no one is trying to make them run on time now." Tha country la much in that same low spirit. Ii ' .-''if ijy com iw w utA itwnet. we: T. m ma u. s. mt. Off. "Mrs. Professor Smith will speak now nbout xstvnr problems she's very hopeful, and promises not to men- J lion any of the dreadful things going on!" Market Quotations No. 1. s A, S3.S9; bakers No. 1, S4.29; Ho. -, J. J. NEW YORK. Jin. t AP) The (took market wu hither today In a continua tion of tha advance which started In the preceding session after President Truman lUted that steel price would be allowed to rise illghUy. Cloetnf quotaUona: American Can 1014 Am Tel 4c Tel 181V. Anaconda 4S Calif Packing Common weal til At Sou . Curtis-Wright General Electric General Motor Gt Nor By pfd Int Harvester Kennecott Long-Bell "A" Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelv K Y Central Northern Pacific Fac Gas gc 1 J C Penney Safeway Stores , , Sears Roebuck Southern Pacific Standard Brands Sunshine Mining Union Oil Calif Union Pacific S Steel War-, .a- Pictures 41 T,i 481'. BOH vty, 5114 3014 w, as 34 - 35 43 I504 20 V. 3014 .- 6014 47 - 2214 - 2fll' -.148 4 - B6V4 - 33tt Potatoes CHICAGO, Jan. I AP-USDA Pota toes: arrival- on tracJc 74. total u. s. hlnm'tiU 1038. dld stocks: supplies light, demand slow, market unsettled with sligthly weaker feeling prevailing. New stock: supplies light, demand light, market .(. v. Idaho Russet Burbanks. U. S. No. 1, 93.S3-3.90, Nebraska Bliss Tri umphs, U. S. No. 1, 93.50; Minnesota and florin uaxoia uoDDier-, conimereiai. 2. 35-2 SO; Bliss Triumphs, V. S. No. 1, washed $3.10; South Dakota Cobblers, Wisconsin Chlppewas, commercial, $2.45; Wisconsin aiitm inumpm, gner--y good quality, $2.39; Florida SO-Ib. sacks ox uiiss inumpni, u. o. no. x, e-i.ou. LIVESTOCK DENVER, Jan, B (AP-USDA) Salable and total sheen 3300: closlni. very slow. mostly steady; early market strong, spots 10-15 cents higher; several loads strictly good-choice around 105-115 lb. fed wooled lambs $14.40: rood-choice truck- Ins $13.75-14.00; load good-choice -laugh- ler ewes ao.au; duik common -meaium $5.25-6.00; good-choice around 69-70 lb. zee am g xamot i.w-va. SOUTH SAN THAN CISCO. Jan. 0 (AP. USDAI Salable cattle 150; calves 10; mostly mixed dairy and range cows; slow, about steady with week's 25-50 cent decline; common-medium cows 50 75 cents lower: late yesterday and to day cutler-common cows aa.uu-iu.ou; can ners $6.50-7.00; common-good sausage bulls $10.00-12.00; calves steady; few common-medium vealers $11.00-13.00. Salable hogs 100, market steady; good choice 200-300 lb. barrows and gilts $15.80; good sows $15.09. Salable sheen none: market nominal: good-choice 00-100 lb. lambs quoted $14.50; medium-good wooled ewes quoted $5.90-6.29. PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 0 (AP-USDA) Potatoes: local Burbanks, $2.00-3.00 cental; Deschutes 100s. No. 1, $3.25 cent al, 25s, 85 cents. LOS ANGELES. Jan. 0 (AP-USDA. Potatoes: 13 broken, 31 unbroken cars Tick: Idaho 10, California 5, Utah 3 ed; 16 cars arrived by truck; market j weaker. . VN FRANCISCO, Jan. 0 (AP-USDA) ( does: 5 broken, 6 unbroken cars on r; k; California 1, Oregon 4 arrived; car arrived by truck from Oregon. jk.ttiket firm. Ormann nnaa-hittM PhimI, Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly JL FT m rhsorastle, arthritis er K5W0.' fflrtf ? Js sp&. CJii. -" .hB ltn do not quickly laar. PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 9 (AP-USDA-Salable cattle 250, total 450; salable and total calves 35: market fairly active, mostly steady; few feeder steers $12.00 13.00; one lot mixed steers and heifers $15.00; few common-low medium heifers $0.50-13.00; canner and cutter cows $6.00 7.50; shells down to $5.00 and below; fat dairy type cows $8.50-9.50; common medium beef cows $10.00-11.00; good beef cows salable $12.00-13.00; sausage bulls $9.50-11.00: few beef bulls $11.50 12.00; good-choice vealers $14.50-15.50; common-medium grades $10.00-14.00. Salable hogs 150, total 2000; market steady; good-choice 190-290 lb. $15.80; 340 lb. $15.00; good sows 814.00-50; good choice around 110-115 lb. feeder pigs $15.00-50; 60-72 lb. $14.00. I Salable and total sheep 400; few good ,nnir wet fleeced lambs steady at $13.50; strictly good-choice quotable to $14.00; several lots common-medium .trades $11.00-13.00; sizable lots feeder lambs $11.00; good ewes mostly so.uu; common grades $2.00-50. WHEAT CHICAGO. Jan. 9 (AP) Grain futures prices bowed in rapid succession to all the influences today. The buying support generally was .-ft-iH-u-t tn tht Ktnek market and in' nation talk, with profit takers and hedge sellers having an Inning here and mere on iracuonai Duiges. fluctuation! most of the time were witmn or cem euner way zrom jw ta-rrln v' , vin mintatinns. Wheat t.-ised unchanged to c higher than yesterday's finish. May $1.80 '; corn unchanged at 11.18'i celling; 7 10 vis mmjr 1171.1 t changed to 2Vc higher. May $1.7 barley unchanged to Vc higher, $1.22?. Eugene M i-jamain rail Sacramento Portland Reno San Francisco Seattle Medford Red Bluff Weather Max. Mfn. Preclt -.41 ..55 14 34 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA .00 .00 .00 .00 .00 .00 .00 .00 Mostly cloudy today and tonight; Increasing cloudiness Thursday with light rain ex treme north portion; slightly warmer to day and in northern oortlon tonight: gentle variable wind off coast. WASHINGTON Rein west portion to day, spreading to east portion tonight, occasional rain or snow, scattered show ers west portion, intermittent rain or now east portion Thursday, warmer tonight; strong to gale southerly winds off coast, ahiftinflr to amithweaterlv to night. OREGON---CI(Mif1v WMt Mrllnn fifa-r tonight and Thursday; rain northeast portion mis afternoon, reaching south' Thursday; increasing cloudiness east por. Sinclair To Teach Here Al Sinclair, former Klamath Union hii!h school science and mathematics instructor prior to his enlistment in the United States army in August, 1942, will resume his classwork Won day. January 14. it was an nounced today. Sinclair was discharged from the army with the rank of master sergeant after serving in the African campaign and for one and one-half years in the Euro pean theater. He was with the late Gen. Patch when the armv went into southern France. Be fore returning here, Sinclair spent some time with his. par ents. Col. and Mrs. W. S. Sin clair, at Galveston. Tex. Sinclair will replace Mrs. jean Hammers who has been substituting at KUHS but she will continue on a part time basis, teaching extra subjects to be offered this next semester. OBITUARIES KAREN DOROTHY SIMMONS Karen Dorothy Simmons, infant daugh ter of Ernest C. Simmons, passed away tn this city on Tuesday, January 8, 1946 at 4:50 p. m. Little Karen is sur vived by her father; a brother, Thomas E. Simmons; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Simmons of Glasgow, Ky. and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Amsten of Klamath Falls; great-grandmother, Mrs. Karen Ovcrby of Elisabeth town, Perm. Funeral serv ices for Karen and her mother, Dorothy E. Simmons, will be held In the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home, 925 High, on Monday, January 14, 1h6 at 2:30 p. m. with Rev. S. M. Topness of the Klamath Lutheran church officiat ing. CLARENCE D. DeWITT Clarence D. DeWltt, a resident of Klamath Falls for the past IB years, passed away In this city on Tuesday, January 8, 1946 at 9:50 p. m. He was a native of Monmouth, Ore., and was aged 54 years 9 months and 2 days at the time of his passing. He is survived by the following: his wife Florence of Klamath Falls; his mother, Marguerite D. O'Brien of Portland, Ore.; two sons. Rex P. O'Brien of Colton. Calif., and Walter B. O'Brien of Klamath Falls; two aaugntcrs, vera scnmia oi fort land and Lucille Shuttle of Spokane, Wash.; three brothers, Berl and Jess O'Brien of Portland, Ore., and Franfc O'Brien of Vemonla, Ore. , and eight grandchildren. The remains rest at Ward's Klamath Funeral Home, 923 High. Funeral announcement appears elie- wttere in Uus issue. FUNERALS HARVEV SHERMAN MARLEV Funeral services for the late Harvey Sherman Marley who passed away in this city on Thursday, January 3, 1946 following an extended Illness were held in Keno cemetery on Wednesday, Jan uary 9. 1936 at 11 a. m. with the Rev. D. B. Anderson of the Klamath Temple of this city officiating. Commitment services and Interment followed. Ar rangements were under the direction of the Earl Whltlock Funeral Home of this city. lillipi: From Th Klamath Nwa Jan. 9, 1936 Mayor Willis Mahonoy, In a Jackson Day speech here, charged that the democratic party in Oregon Is controlled by "Hoover democrats." e The state highway commis sion will soon open bids on the Merrili-Hatficld connection of the state highway. . Fiom The Klamath Republican Jan. 4, 1908 Five hundred people crowd ed the opera house Monday night to witness J. V. Houston's annual masquerade ball. Miss Elsie Jamison won the prize for the most original character, and Lester Leavitt was prize-winner as the most comical character. Abel Ady has purchased 2477 acres of marsh land, adjacent to the new Klamath reclama tion project. He now holds more than 14,000 acres of marsh land. burns Fatal To Two-Year-Old Boy SILVERTON. Jan. 9 (JP) Two-year-old David Graves leu into a tub of hot water at his home yesterday and died of, burns in a hospital eight hours later. His mother was washing clothes in the basement and set a tub of hot water on the floor. The boy stumbled into it. He was tne son or Mr. ana Mrs. Wilbur Graves, and was the youngest of five children. PETER HUDBOVICH Tun.ral services for tha lata) Peter Mudrovlch. who passed away in this city on Tuesday, January 8, 1946, will be held ui the Sacred Heart church, 6th and High, Thursday, January 10, 1946 at B:30 a. m. when a reaulem mass will be celebrated for the reoose of hla soul, with Rev, T. P. Casey officiating. Concluding services will follow in the Mt- Calvary Memorial park. Ward's Klamath Funeral Home in charg of arrangements. CLARENCE D. DeWITT Funeral services for the late Clarence D. DeWilt, who passed away in this city on Tuesday, January B, 1U46, will be held In the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home, 929 High on Saturday, January 12, 1946 at 2 p. m. with tha Klamath Falls Aerie No. 2090 of tha FOE of. ficlatlng. Concluding services and In terment will follow at the Linkvllle cemetery. Friends are respectfully In vited to attend. tlon today, becamlntf eloudv tanleht and Thursday, occasional fain or snow north portion of interior tonight and Thurs day; warmer tonight; fresh to strong southerly winds off coast, shifting to southwesterly tonight Sore throat Asa to a cold. ..let a little time-tested VapoRub melt ) a m g V VApoRua In your mouth rart -Dei e; Acts AT ONCE to relieve mrcm Prescribed by thousandsof Doctoral ' J" l toitntiflcaUy prepared to act at once not only to relieve ..uoh coughing but aim to loosen tickling phlegm and make It easier to ra.Ua. Safe and mighty effective tor ?npen.fvV0Ung- We"Mnt """. iU.varug.tox.PERTUSSIN?. DRIFTWOOD 124 So. 7th RE-OPENING Sat., Jan. 12 Under New Management Open 10 a. m. Daily, Including Sunday Dan F. Nolan Roger Hambleron Just Arrived!! Men's 4 Buckle Cowboy ARCTICS 4.50 ArrWlng right when needed moit ... to come early ai there will be heary demand fox these. f'-TT llll LdrewsJ MJUfSTORE TM Mala St. Now Tou Can Ha-e An Oil FLOOR FURNACE 8 Per Month I For Only Full Price $279.50 Includes 160 Gal. Tank . Fully Installed Thermostat Control and you need pay NO money down! Other Modeli Ai Low Af $109 (Not Initalled) Ball & Porter 01 Spring The World Today By DeWnT MACKENZIE AP World Traveler vsmwimvwvisJ PARIS, Jan. 0 No conduve in history has mount so much to world peace mt docs the mceiniK of the United Na tions oi'Kimlzii llon assembly here on the edge of a Eu rope which is struKRlIng to avert utter chaos. This moves one to the thouRht that It ...I..I.I knit. a salutary ef- M-J,Z.E feet If the members of the as sembly could come here to Ver sailles and spend u few mo ments in sllont contemnlatlon of tho mess mndo by the Lcuiiue of Nations which was created hero a quarter of a century ai(o. Your columnist wulchen I ho drafting of the lentfuo covenant here, and finally saw the sinn ing of the peace treaty which brought the organization into being. That was a great day for hu manity or so it seemed. After the signatures of the conquer ors and the vanquished had been affixed to the treaty in tho mirrored palace, the crowd of spectators which Jammed tho pnlaco gardens sent up a mighty cry for tho "13lg Three" Wil son, Clcmonceau and Lloyd George. Theso famous states men came to one of tho bal conies and acknowledged the acclaim of the people. But this didn't satisfy tho throng, which insisted that the Big Three come down. Amnilno Scene Then followed an amazing scene. The three who had dom- innted the framlnc of the nenri descended to the gardens, and arm-in-arm walked across tha grounds while tho wildly cheer ing mass reached out eager hands in an effort to touch tho great personalities. Frantic se cret service men strove in vain to keep the millinii throng away, fearing some untoward incident. That demonstration symbol ized the gratitude of the world for what then was believed to be tho specific for peace. Wo thousht wo had outlawed war. but we hadn't come within gun- snot ot II. Now we are beginning a new effort to outlaw war, and the situation is far more dangerous than it was at the end of the last conflict. Both Europe and Asia are in that unhappy state of disorganization where any thing could happen. World Looking To UNO The whole world Is looking to the UNO. Dispatches from Wtdntsday, Jan. . !.4s HERALD AND NEW TOUR London make it clear that the a t o in i e bomb is loading tho agonda. Well, all nations want the atomic bomb controlled, of course, but 1 vonturo (he thought that probably they fear mo distrust and suspicions which have been created by the existence of the bomb mure than they do the terrible cx plosive power Itself. The distressed countries are looking to the new United Na tlons organization to dispel the suspicions and iron out the cur ncultlcs which have been re tarding tho rehabilitation of Eu rope and Asia, You can see with half an eye mat tne peace organization must swing into concerted ac tion quickly and firmly if Eu rope is to be saved from fur ther calamity. A hungry, cold and ragged eontlnont will tell you that. Sailor Nabbed On Hit-Run Rap Ralph McLcod Jr., a sailor re siding at 253 Murtln, has posted 30 bail with clly pollco for lilt-and-run driving and having no operator's license. He was in volved in an accident on East Main last night. McLeod was picked up at the skuting rink on S. till) bv pollco lifter his 1038 Ford sedan run Into the rear of a car parked on East Main near the Hulley street Intersection about 10 o'clock last night. The sailor backed off and drove away, pollco said, but a white sailor cap was left at tho scene of the accident. Classified Ads Bring Results. 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