35eral&an&$to$ Boyle's Notebook
r r (Editor's note: Boyle's column toda;
PRANK JFNKIWi MALCOLM BW-EV
Editor Manjiglng Editor
Kntrd m wetted cUu matter tt the poetofnc ol KUmatti
rail. Or., om Aufust ao, looa, under et ol conrtM,
March t, 1878
(Editor's note: Boyle's column today Is In the
form of a letter to his wife, Frances).
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to
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
WONDER who invented the term, "lowly
potato?"
It certainly Isn't lowly around here, when
It leads Klamath crop values
with an annual return of
about $10,000,000 (1944 and
1943.)
No one familiar with the
history of Klamath basin agri
culture would call the potato
lowly, for it has led our farm
industry upwards in the last
quarter of a century to the
point where the 194S Income
was nearly $26,000,000.
Right now. the potato dom
inates the thinking of those EPLEY
who are telling us how to conserve food that
we may save - hungry millions of the Orient
and Europe from starvation. It's not lowly
it's the top item in that picture.
Demonstration
HEREWITH is a story carried on the AP
wire from the bureau of home economics.
USDA. The boldface type is ours, just
demonstrate the point:
WASHINGTON, April 29 (.-P) There is a
starving family on your doorstep. Will you
turn them away?
They are the hungry millions of Europe,
China, India. Their food must come from
every American home, as surely as if they
knocked on the door and asked.
You want to feed them but don't know
how? The bureau of home economics of
; the agriculture department says here are
some of the ways:
Hungry families in Europe need bread.
Starving thousands in China need rice. Amer
icans who eat potatoes can give them both.
Use mashed potatoes instead of toast under
creamed meat, chicken, fish. Try poached
eggs baked in nests of mashed potato.
Ask for potato salad instead of a sandwich.
Stuff meat or poultry with potatoes in
stead of bread. Try mashed potatoes instead
of pastry atop meat pics and other baked
dishes.
At breakfast, serve potatoes occasionally
instead of wheat cereal or breads. One
small serving of potato is equal in food
value to slice of bread.
Use those leftovers. Mashed potatoes make
potato cakes, boiled potatoes can be turned
into hash-brown or creamed potatoes.
In making pancakes, replace a large part
of the flour with fresh, grated potato. Let
mashed potatoes do duty for some of the
flour in making hot potato scones and rolls.
Use potatoes in place of rice, whenever
possible.
Don't throw rice at weddings. You may
. be tossing away a starving child's dinner.
Thus, Klamath's major crop has assumed
terrific importance In the world food picture.
Last year's production totaled about 11.500
carloads. There will be more of them this
1 year.
f
lERLIN, April 29 (P Dear Frances:
Coming back to Germany is like revisiting
an old acquaintance ana rinding mm in uie
throes of cancer.
You may not ever have liked him, but you
hate to see anyone in that condition.
You remember a year ago I wrote you of
the vast devastation we saw as General Hodges'
first army was moving eastward for its junction
with the Russians on the Elbe river?
I could write you the same tilings today.
The face of Germany remains the same. The
rubble and ruin of war have been cleared from
the streets, but there has been little if any re
building in the damaged cities.
This whole country is still one festering
wound. After 12 months the people are still
suffering from, the shock of defeat. They are
growing more hungry now and as they grow
hungrier they grow more resentful and emo
tional. After flying to Frankfurt from Rome, I took
a twoiay jeep trip through agricultural Ba
varia before coining on to Berlin by train. The
difference between country and city in Ger
many is the difference between life and death.
War has made no fundamental change in the
existence of the old Bavarian farmers.
They have stored away plenty of food. Geese
and chickens peck the edge of manure piles
before their quaint old timber and plaster
houses.
T.
drive through Bavaria's rolling green
acres now, past pink and white flowering
fruit trees, is to know Germany at its most
beautiful.
But the cities they are full of unhappy,
hungry and idle people, for whom the devil is
finding work because Uncle Sam, Uncle Joe,
and their friends have not been able to find a
formula among themselves to help Germany
seek its own salvation.
There is so much to be done. All roads are
in terrible shape except Hitler's famous Auto
bahns. Hundreds of peacetime industries that
could be revived are lifeless. Little effort has
been made to restore the shattered stores and
dwellings.
Everywhere on the streets you see empty
sleeves and empty pants legs the war cripples.
The Teutonic mind craves certainty, and in
Germany there is nothing but uncertainty
today. German character is deteriorating into
dangerous self-pity, because the people see
no way out, no future.
THEY still remain individually honest even
in hunger and in the cities every third
sentence from the average German deals with
food. If you left three chocolate bars on your
hotel bureau top in Naples and returned a day
later, all three would be gone.
If you did the same thing in Rome, two
would be gone. If you did it in Frankfurt
or Berlin, all three would remain untouched.
At night each main street in a German city
in the American sector is a lover's lane for
GI's and German girls. For all the official
hullabaloo that is raised over this, I think
these youngsters are the most natural people
in this incubator of world hatred called Ger
many. They at least are finding love among
the ruins and if their love is twisted it is no
more twisted than the world of suspicious allies
in which they live.
Yours truly.
HAL.
HIGH SCHOOL'
ijiililill
v3i I
' 7 v rw
By JOAN O'NEILL
KUHS came out on top at the
recent invitational southern Oregon-northern
California track
meet. At the end of the meet
Klamath had attained 57 i points.
Second place group was Medford
with a total of
53 1 points. Sev
enteen schools
frnm nuar thfi
state Dartici- V
pa ted in the
e v p n t which xj.
Saturday,
tirst place i ,
winners from flJZje 2
Klamath were vjf&a
Irvin Whitt,
javelin; Ben Joai Ne,u
DeVore, discus; Tom Edwards,
broad jump, and Dick Yates in
the 440 dash. KUHS also had
four second placers: Joe Zaro
zinski, shot put; Jim Pope, high
hurdles; Bill Rose, javelin, and
Bob Redkey, low hurdles.. The
relay team took a second place
berth also.
The cup given by the Lost
River Dairy was taken by Ras
mussen of Bend. The relay cup
went to Medford, and the Leslie
cup went to Tad Gandee of Ash
land. Klamath was awarded the
Lions club perpetual trophy for
the fourth consecutive year. This
trophy will be given to the stu
dent body at some assembly in
the future.
Next weekend the B track
squad will head for Grants Pass
to enter a southern Oregon con
ference meet. Saturday will find
the Pelican squad in Bend for an
invitational dual track meet.
Student Body Play
The annual student body play,
which is presented by the dra
matics department, will be given
tomorrow starting about 11
o'clock. There will be a break
in the play for noon hour and
the play will resume at 12:50.
The kids will not have to report
to home room. Tickets for the
play are 30 cents; they were on
sale in home room today.
The play, "She Stoops to Con
quer," boasts one of the largest
casts ever used. Leads for the
play are Ted Reeves, Mr. Hard-
castle; Gloria Mayfield. Mrs.
Hardcastle; Marilyn O'Neill, Miss
Hardcastle; Shirley Dalton, Miss
Neville; Bill Jones, Tony Lump-
Kin; uave Williams, Mr. Marlow;
Gary Cruickshank, Mr. Hastings;
John Ogle, Sir Charles Marlow,
and Bud Selby, the singing land
lord. Other names of members
of the cast will a d Dear in this
column tomorrow.
Drunk Driving
Charge Lodged
Utto Leapold, -year-old car
penter living at 3840 S. 6th,
was arrested by state police at
2:15 a. m. Monday and lodged
in the county jail charged with
driving while under the influ
ence of intoxicating liquor.
(Juicers said Lloyd was Dick-
ed up on highway 66 as his car
was traveling west.
Business Trip Harold Tal
ley, assistant Boy Scout execu
tive in the Modoc area council,
is in Klamath Falls on a short
business trip from his headquar
ters in Bend. He will leave
Wednesday.
STATIC
SIDE GLANCES
ft
If tfdS-si (
n . mr u m
NmMe
COW. BT Mr MSVICf. INC. T M "IC. V . MT. Of t 4 - 11
MAI. II NEWS. Blleaaala rMi, lira.
MONDAY, trill SS, III, r.. rant
NATIONAL BABY WEEK
APRIL 29th to MAY 4th
sitting
pretty
In my
Playtox
Panties
"Lei's be modern pnrrnls uiitl ronsun wilh Junior nlioul
smoking I'm afraid he's loo bitf lor you lo spunk 1"
Move Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Mo-
cabee moved over the weekend
from 435 High to their new ad
dress, 522 5th.
Tonight's Lum 'n Abner show
will play host to Kay Kyser
when he visits them for the
first time in over three years.
And when Kyser hits Pine Ridge
it leads to nothing but trouble
and confusion He calls on Lum
'n Abner to enlist their aid in
finding a typical Arkansas plant
to add to his collection one
plant from every state in the
union. In delivering Kay's mes
sage to the boys, Grandpappy
Spears loses the message and at
tempts to tell them what it was
all about, getting pretty badly
mixed up in the process. Lum
gets the idea that Henry J.
Kaiser is coming to look over
Pine Ridge for a possible UNO
site. From that point on even
pandemonium is not a clear
thinking leader.
As of Wednesday, Sammy
Kaye's program "So You Want to
Lead a Band?" will originate in
Hollywood rather than in New
York. The program features lo
cal amateurs who win or lose
on audience approval in lead
ing the band. From these con
testants one will be chosen from
each section of the country to
travel to Hollywood and com
pete for the SI 000 grand prize.
Youth Held
For Theft
Of Autos
A 16-year-old Klamath Falls
boy who for two weeks operat
ed a one-man car theft ring, ac
cording to a statement he made
when arrested by Seattle police,
has been brought back here for
court action after the FBI de
clined to prosecute him.
The youth was reported to
officials here as a runaway on
April 12. In his statement he
said that he stole a Ford pick
up, registered to H. C. Arnold,
Modesto, Calif., at the high
school April 11.
He drove the pickup to Oak
ridge that night, parked there
and slept in the car. Next morn
ing he sold the spare tire for
$7.50 and proceeded to Seattle.
That night he parked the car
on the Seattle wateriront ana
slept in an all-night movie, then
drove to Oak Harbor. Wash.,
and back to Seattle the next
day.
He again parked the car and
spent the next three nights in
the movie house. On April 16,
he sold the tires and wheels off
the truck for S20 and aban
doned it. Next day he stole a
1937 Ford from a Seattle park
ing lot, he said, sold the spare
tire for to and drove to Ev
erett. In Everett, he told officers,
he sold the tires, wheels, tubes
and hub caps, bought some
clothes and took a bus back to
Seattle.
His next car was a 1941 Nash,
stolen on the street at Seattle,
and he drove it to Centralla.
That car was already reported
as stolen by someone else in
Yakima and Centralia police
spotted it, with the boy sleep
ing inside, on April 17, and ar
rested him.
The FBI was notified of the
boy's statement of his activities
but declined to prosecute him
because of his youth. He was
held in Seattle several days,
then sent back to Klamath Fails
for court' action on the theft of
the pickup truck.
Burns Assumes
Editorial Job
Lt. Col. R. C. Burns, former
executive officer of the Marino
Barracks, returned to Klamath
Kails today to assume the du
ties of news editor of The Her
ald and News, it was announced
by Malcolm Epley, managing
editor.
He succeeds Paul Ilnincs, who
left today for Sturgis, Mich.,
where he will be associated
with his father, publisher of
the Sturgis Journal.
Burns was stationed at the
Barracks from February, 1945,
until November 24. 1945. His
wife, the former Louise Sulli
van. Red Cross social service
worker at the Barracks dispen
sary, accompanied him to Klam
ath Falls. They are currently
house guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Getz.
Treatment Donna Lee
Brautlacht. 17. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George Brautlacht of
Chiloquin, Is in Hillside hos
pital receiving medical treat
ment. Brautlacht is a Southern
Pacific employe.
Sunday Visit Tonl Rey
nolds of the reclamation office
spent the weekend visiting in
Gold Hill with the Centers.
Hans Norland Fir Insurance.
123 N. 6th St.
There are a lot of fish In the
Klamath river, but yesterday
they must have been overawed
by the human side of the thing.
There seemed to be a fisherman
for every rock along the way,
and you practically had to ask
permission to fish. Not just a
whole lot of fish were being
taken though. Water was too
high, or the water was too low.
Maybe it was too clear or too
cloudy. Or maybe we all left
the correct lure at home.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
s Phone
Venetian Blinds
Patterson Furniture
230 Main
Jvfl sayi
Ml INCUS M ISIIIM WAK
...U. Uf libi U W.rk
"Old Engl'tar, Wax" it pouword.
Ukt pulling a rabbit out of a hot, ffcti
wixard wok dri to
a cnrstol-hard ftnhh
in 15 minute. Pro
tects linolwm from
dirt and wor. Cot
a pint today.
jMi mill i if
TIME TO PAINTf
PRESERVATIVE
D8!NK rfpsl
mil u i
I-
THRIFT
can be taught your
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Klamath Falls,
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KFLW Feature
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