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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1946)
JP Chief imbasts pmocrats '"'l , Pcinocrutlc fee Si !"""" "l "U f" .V i trotli lu 'c 5'crnmci'l is ."-' ' Met Ills li'flloil a! 1 ."' " 1'l,nl- ',r ;mii i "i"'" v Y,r,l,,T 1"" tJ " ui r.-.Hinnli'l ft1'. , i v clllMK tin- lU-liirii- "l"'. L' hV ..PUI.IICM... I': nallimul comiiiinen m '". In thf ('" 'IK'' '"' J, it- Tolling Tito IaIUov Lillirt jrlfiiaa) hart mmi rm bt mars than I' 0'tt In Unilh, mini Its writ (in ISR'tilV on ONI DDI si Ihf papal unly, and mull ba tlinad. Cafltribullana loilowing Ihaaa full. art warmly wJ Lbership Club Present Awaras it 10 D m Friday the chain "(Lmrrce members hip w hold n I""'.' , party room to prrwn '" LJ..A I,. he recent .tv chain"11 one or more mi'inhr-rs in iampaimi ' nn i Around 35 periuMU lire ded to be preaeni " rharlcr members of the club h wns formed nisi tors Will Face l Check Charge limy Bowers, arrested by .iv Sheriff Dnlc Mlittonn as biltlvc from Justice, today cd (xirnniuoii m mM will be returned to ake to 'ace prosecution on check charues. e Tulclakc justice of the tiai let Bowers nan ai P. iluck Dlnnar The Amerl- ttllon auxiliary will enter- ihe Lei on wnn a poiiucK tr Tuesday, April 16, at 6:30 In the Lesion hall. 4tn and kith. All Legionnaire! and ire welcome. Ilesrrva may be made by calling The auxiliary will hold a ar meeting after the dinner Initiation of new candidates. CARD OF THANKS wlih to express our heart- thanks and deep gratitude lie many friends fur their lathy and beautiful floral of- it In the death of our loved Ellen Cross Glvnn. Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Glvan Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Griffin Nr. and Mrs. D. A. Caiuldy (Gordon and Jill Givan ABOUT LUMBER AND STRIKES KLAMATH KAU.S, Ore., (To Iho Editor) I never have will ten a letter to tint editor before but I believe it lit tlmu (hut the public knows wluil is UiiK on In the lumber Industry. Last August when the IWA CIO Lumber Worker of the Kliinuitli busln went on strike to protect llielr Interests they were severely erltlcl.eil by the press unci tliu public for iiolillug up much needed lumber production. Now a few fuels. When the wur broke out in '41, the lumber npfrulom hud on bund millions of feet of lumber thul wua niunufuctiiied lit very low costs. This lumber wus Immediately sold to the government mill Its nuclides ul exliorbltiint prices. Every tlmu the government grunted the workers u smiill In- ctciim) In wages the operulors wero ulso grunted un Iiiitciikl' In the price ot lumber. Now, when tin: IWACIO in 1U4U, linked for u 2i cent per hour Increase und settled lor 121 cents per hour early nils year, the operators ugulu uskeel lor a price, increase lu ousel the siiuill ruisu the workers got, stal ing they could not produce the much needed lumber (or postwar housing ul the present puces. Heceully they were grunted an Increase of $4,110 per thousand which would more than offset the liiercuse In wages grunted the men who produce tins lum ber. Were they satisfied und did Ihey sliirl to produce lumber? NO! Instead, they have stopped shipping lumber und urc piling 11 up ill their warehouse!.. One company bus even removed part of Us uuichlnery so us lo have more room lo pile up huge slocks of finished box shook which Is needed for the spring vegetubla crop. Another firm bus about 40 box cars louded with building lum ber unci rather than ship It, they are paying demuruge for the cars lo all on the company's tracks, and so on, all over Iho basin and the northwest. Now, tho question "Why?" The answer: They are attempt ing to force the Ol'A to grant them an additional $3.40 per thousand feci for lumber that is needed loiluy as badly as It wai during lliti war, Are the public und the press erltlcl.lng the operators for their STRIKE as they did the IWA CIO lust August? No, becuuse the shoe Is on tlin other fool, if II were lh workers on strike In stead of the operators they would be erltlcl.ed lo high lleuven. Let s heur some comments. Sincerely, An IWA CIO Lumber Worker, W. J. MARTIN, li)3 Etnu .Street, Klumutii r'ulls, Oregon, ABOUT ALTAMONT DRIVE iviwiiviAlli rni.l.S, ore., (Kpeciuij in jour ivionduy a coition, April b, 1 reuu ubuul now ur. v. 'luber leu aooul iiiuslu wuy. 1 too would like to gel my two cents in, yes, sir, nn Willi Ur. luber ull the wuy. i'neie should be something done. 1 uon I know much uboui bhunlu wuy, but 1 would like to tell the rouil commissioner, H we have one, thul Altamom drive has reuiiy gone to the dogs. And bus ueen that wuy lor u long long lime, it s very Irritating to try to gel u cur over the . . ULAN HETTY . . . i)IANK . , . bumps. And is ulso very dangerous, us L)r Tuber suld. 1 think thul every one living on roads such us Shasta way mid Altiiuiont drive should tell the Editor. Who knows? We might gel results. Very truly yours, 1H. UON 11. I1AKER. 344U Anderson. ABOUT ROAD QUESTION KLAMATH EALLS, Ore., (To the Editor) There bus been quite un argument III our neigh borhood concerning the right of wuy through a mini s prop erty. If you have a road that the public bus used for a nunv ber of veins but is not a county or slate road, haven't you the right to close It if you desire lo do so? Ii there any law stating thul even If you have a title deed to the property that you cannot close It If It has been used for 10 years or more us a public thoroughfare? Sincerely, MRS. C. E. WEAVER. Editor's Note The answer to this question Is determined by which of a number of factual situations may apply and can be answered only by a com petent attorney who has made a studv of the particular facts applicable. BOYLE'S NOTEBOOK By HAL BOYLE ROME, April II (fl) In llnly they bent you over the skull with culture and muke you leiirn to like It. You conic Into a restaurant looking for a hamburger and a quiet corner hi which to wolf It down und Ihey assault you with Verdi, Rossini, Bellini, Ma.scag nl und other local und foreign musical long hairs. iiy the time tho evening Is over, you find you urc beginning lo like the darn stuff. Tin; trouble with all art, mu sic and other assorted bargain counter cultures In America Is thul they try to cruin them down your throat In high school while you arc cither writing a brief 10 page love note to the gal In the next row, or wondering whot the cafeteria will have for lunch. Lov of Music Here they tench you In a soft, beautiful and offhand way thul makes music, art und literature ns much a natural pari of these cmotionul people's lives as food und love und work und sleep arc In America. And, unless they embrace und enclose life In this wuy no school teacher or librar ian can make these gracious things have meaning for us In our own preoccupied lives. In high school and college the savages who Inhabit those places have no real leisure for Beetho ven's off beats or Drydcn's tri ple rhymes. They ore caught In thul cureless and most Influ ential passion of their careers puppy love, probably the last truly unselfish feeling many of uiem win ever know. It Ik only as they grow older and have made or lost some small place in the world that they have time on their hands to feel sorry for what they missed or to glory In what they have gained. In our prosperous and enlightened land they usually celebrate this victory or mourn this defeat by turning to alco hol or chasing their neighbors' wives or reading a monthly book picked for them by somebody else. In Italy cud, sorry, pover ty-ridden, glorious Italy they follow the precepts of Aristotle, or the Greeks whose wisdom humanized the Romans, and breathe music as their lifetime solace almost with their mother'! milk. That Is why wine la to them a supplementary passion and a secondary narcotic. They gave me my first seri ous lesson in music tonight in a small restaurant in the Via Erat- tina. My teachers were there among Rome's hundreds of cufe musicians. Because we were Americans and they knew we wera good for a few lire they first played In limping greeting such tunes as "In The Mood" and "I Can't Give You Anything But Love Baby. But once we applauded they began to bend their violin, gui tar and mandolin double with old favorites that never meant quite so much in music apprecia tion courses back home The Poet and Peasant Overture" "Drlgo's Serenade," "Barber of Seville," und arias from the op era "Rlgoletto." Of course this Is all "freshman music" to erudite people who can tell you offhand whether Sibelius scratches out his compo sitions with chalk or fountain pen. But they put a zest to their Restaurant Equipment Deilgnad To Order Exhaust Fountains Syatems Fillers e Hoods Cabinet! Sinka .Work e Draining Tables Boards Warmer! Steam Fans Tables Back Bars Statnlc!! Steel Monel J. S. Pode 461 Spring Phone 3616 THE AND NEEDLEWORK SHOP 325 Main Suite 7 Knitting Yarns Hiawatha Crepe-Corde Hiawatha Chenille for Hat! Knitting Instruction! Commercial Knitting Suian Bates Noedlei KATHLEEN KRIZ Owner . Shop Cloied on Monday! Job that wai unforgettable In that spaghetti arena where one car bide lamp was kept lit In case the electric age went on the blink. And,, without a revolving stage or a bronchltic tenor they made Verdi sound more real than he usually does ax piuyed before a white shirtcd stuff shirted au dience. They made a handful of violin more important than an underdone porkchop. And to one musical illiterate that helps ex plain what Italy lives by more than the guide books or UNRRA's first annual report. OZONE HEAD DIES . PORTLAND, April 11 IIP) Charles N. Ryan, former theatre manager and currently head of the National Ozone corporation, died here last night after several months' illness. NOW SCIENCI HELPS NATURI Relieve "Cosmetic COMPLEXION" SHnre haiditwovrrrd a VitilLi(n Subttinrt which nnpirrviYc ineyoutfiiui tjrautyanfl lex ture of the tkin ... It hHp relive the lined, ins uptw-a ranee that "make-up" can not hide. H Is afeMrt4 through the tkin to where its activity help nature rettore agin tiuue. 'I hat'a why women over 30 nrrkinKrclirffordry, droopy akin, are unrig QUihNOI. each night. DON'T EXPICT THIS QUALITY IN ORDINARY SKIN CRIAMS QUEKNOI. contain a this re-vitaliiinf, Eatro Rrnic Subfttance which helps rcatore the firm, smooth, freshness and beauty . . . the youthful texture of the akin, th.it age steal away. Start mm QUHENOL now. Some net con vmcingreaultafioon. Boudoir type bottle.laats 30 to 60 dayt-imiy I2.ttplus taxJ.Callor phone hc rr.n cut-rate mtca . ..ii. firifii'ir NewUSGAPj 3-WAY PROTECTION tieertwM.e' Tire ll.Mte.re Tea Qt""t7 Matarlala M.e.ni PrecMsIng SHOOP and SCHULZE mm Black & White Super Service Mat set flnel.. 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