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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1946)
PRANK JI.WKIN MALCOLM EPLEY Elliot Umiging Editor tndrid m wcuod rim RiitUf at the poe.oll.ce ol Klmm rX Or on Auguet 20, lofl, undfir ct ol coniieM, Uerch . 1878 SUBSCRIPTION RATES! l y carrier . liy mall ...month tl.C ..month fl.( By mail , By mail Today's Roundup BY MALCOLM EPLEY WE are doubtful whether there was much cheering in Oregon when its Junior senator, Wayne Morse, accused the president of "ham acting' in announc ing the end of the railroad strike while speaking to con gress on the labor crisis. The inside facts as to whether Mr. Truman knew, when he started to speak, that the strike end impended, are not available to us. But if he did, his announcement in the course of the message was no more than dramatic show manship, something Senator Morse understands well. EPLEY There was nothing in the situation that Justified an attack on the president .of the United States that was plainly in poor taste. Whether the president be democrat or republi can, that would be the opinion of this particular Orcgonian, who supported and voted for Wayne Morse in republican primaries and the general election of 1944. Opportunity SEVERAL months ago, we commented here on the remarkable opportunity which lay at the door of Senator Morse to exert the leadership that would show the way out of the critical labor crisis that has had the country by the heels since V-J Day. We had, and still have, faith in the Oregon senator's ability to do this badly needed job. He has the experience, the public's ear, the following in both sides and among middle grounders, to take the helm of a program designed to end the' confusion for the good of the American people as a whole. - The time was ripe when we first mentioned it. It has gotten riper. It is a big challenge whether Senator Morse essays to attempt it will show whether he is a big man. ' There is need for a big man but not a man who is too big for his breeches. Confidence THE confidence we have expressed here in Senator Morse's ability to do this job is Tather-widely held, we are sure. It is held well beyond the limits of Oregon. In a rela tively short space of time, he has become a national figure. . And what an opportunity for a senator schooled in labor procedures and in labor prob lems, who is regarded as liberal enough to receive labor support for the senate, yet also won in the republican primaries where labor's vote was at the time of that election a second ary factor. Everybody slips once in a while. We want to think that the Oregon senator's comment in the senate yesterday was the product of a momentary impulse, and not indicative of the true depth of the man. There are so many bigger things to be done than to make wise cracks at the president of the United States. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLOM WASHINGTON, May 28 Fevers have run so high over Spain, coolness has been impossible for some years. The situation has been so confusingly intertwined with fasco communist politics and religious persecution, as to smother objective truth. In the great flood of propaganda, a penetrative understanding of BOYLE'S NOTEBOOK By HAL BOYLE COPENHAGEN, May 28 OP) Little Denmark produces one commodity besides its well known output of butter, eggs and bacon in which it outranks all the rest of the world lumped to gether. That is women film di rectors. The leader in this field is Mrs. Alice O'Fredericks, a former actress who has ridden herd on 52 pictures, far more than any other woman in cinema history. A vivacious butter blonde with blue eyes that look as if freshly dipped in the Mediterranean, Mrs. O'Fredericks yearns for the monetary freedom of her Holly wood colleagues. Just once she would like a limitless treasury in which to dip her hands and produce a Danish film on the lavish scale typical of American movies. $40,000 Tops "In Hollywood a million dollar budget is nothing," she sighed, "but here the most expensive pic ture ever made in Denmark cost only $40,000." Once a Hollywood talent scout was watching a Danish film in production and asked how many TUESDAY EVE.. MAY 1450 kc. , KFJI KFLW- 8:0OMuilo of Manhattan brlel i:ia saion concert 6:30 Lonli-Conn Pre-Fifti, Broadcast ADC fl:4!tTh Flying Public ABC ti:Jfi Hpart by Uirrjf Wls ' merABC 7:00 Arnold Gralapp, Shrine Talk 7:0.1 Teddy Powell Oreh. 7:1.1 Eugenie Jlilrd ABC 7:HI Malcolm Epley 7:4.1 Howard Nelaon Soe. Stc l.'.O ToastmatCer's Topic K.HOLum 'N AbnrrADC K:ll Jumplnr Jcka H::toiar Ventura ABO 11:4.1 8:00 Bob Willi IIIi Tcxai Flay Bore ABC 0:15 " !:;, Nrtra" 8:4.-. Rlrliard Lelbert, Orean 10:0 Cal Tinncy ABC lit.lA Raymond Swlnr ABO IA.M Docton Talk It Over ABC 10:4ft Ambenaador Orcb ABO 1 1 100 Sign Off 11:13 Il::i0 11:48 Around Amer. Blnner Danrr Red Ryder Mils WEDNESDAY A. M MAY 29 Diwn I'atrol Wake-Io r.rm rare" Newa. llreakrast Edition Stop and jo Rhow Janiss Abba Observes ABC Kfke Manners Allc Hrrakrasl Club AT1C nrrakfaat Club ABO Breakfast Club ABC Morning Reveille N'tw. MBS Rlae and Shine MBS Headline News Today'a Rent Boys Island Melodies fashion Flashes rake It Easy Time MBs 7:00 1:1 J 1:M 7:4J 5:00 :l,1 tM the revolutions has been impossible to attain. Indeed, the people have been so successfully confused that any comment which did not accept the Russian viewpoint was considered "fascisllc" by large numbers. But now that Russia is openly trying to promote a counter revolution through French military action, by agitation in UNO and by goading the United States on its policy, a search for the facts has been set In motion by various authorities, with results which have not received general circu lation, namely these following: A foremost American military authority, in a report widely distributed among American . months M !W ....year $8.00 officers, has concluded communists built up the unsound deceptive propaganda in Spain. The last Spanish election was 10 years ago, and in that balloting, the left parties, which included syndicalists, anarchists, communists and sev eral varieties of republicans received slightly less than 50 per cent of the vote. But by backing a single candidate in each parlia mentary district, they won a majority of 78 votes in the parliament. The right wing, in cluding republicans, monarchists, agrarians and others did not unite on candidates, but com peted with each other and lost the parliament, although their combined popular vote was minutely a majority, President Ousted THE leftwing government then ousted the president and moved to pass a law to seize landholdings legally, but the communists did not await the law, seized estates and church lands, murdering the few of the landlords who did not escape and a large number of the religious. The left government deplored this, but did nothing to stop it, so the army decided to take action. A majority of the army was politically active and rightist, and started a counter revolution. Their leader was killed in opening engagements and Franco, the second senior general who had been in the Canary islands, took over. In the bitter civil war following. Russia contributed a few combat units but not from the red army, munitions supplies and a head quarters combat unit in which Russian officers served in terms generally for six months com bat' experience, but never fraternizing with the Spaniards. The nazis used the war as a proving ground for tactics, and there developed the ultimate use of the plane and tank with ground forces, which was their basic maneuver of World War II. With Franco the ultimate victor, the Spanish communists, anarchists, syndicalists and re publicans fled mostly to France, where more than 100.000 were in concentration camps when World War II broke out. Many fought in the French army, but probably more later in the French underground. As such they had much influence upon the present French government. When Franco caught and executed some of their number in Spain in February, they in stituted the closing of the border and the mov ing of French army units threateningly up to it. So much for mis-read history. The political facts are more difficult to assay. One Ameri can socialist magazine is trying to raise funds . to promote civil war, on the ground that Span ish labor is socialist and has appealed for help, but another socialist magazine here sees the current agitation as a Soviet scheme purely. The head of the movement to raise funds is an avowed member of the communist party, it charges, and it characterizes the whole left Spanish movement as "the most hypocritical, vulgar and corrupt of any front group ever launched by the Comintern." Its writer on the subject charges that Stalin sabotaged the old left government of 10 years ago by promoting a purge in the midst of the battle against Franco. Otherwise, it claims, Spain would not have been lost to fascism. Whatever are the ultimate facts of this poli tics, the facts we already have are enough to show the problem of Spain today is not simply a question of ousting Franco and restoring democracy, such as Poland has presented to UNO. The basic greater truth of the whole matter is there are too few real democrats and republicans in Spain to hope for restoration of our . way of life there, or creation of a government friendly to our ideals, anytime soon, no matter what we do. people were employed on the set. "Twenty," he was told. "Good lord," he said incredu lously, "only 20? Why in Holly wood we have 200 studio police men on the sets." Mrs. O'Fredericks started in films 25 years ago as a script girl, then successively became film cutter, leading lady and director. "After acting in six films I decided it was more fun to stay behind the camera and give or ders," she said. "The only difference between our pictures and those in Amer ica is moneyour scripts are just as good. Oh, if I only had money to buy sets and hire actors. Only Simple Pictures "We can make only simple pictures of few people and how they feel the tragedy in their hearts "I direct, cut and help in the making of costumes and sets. I don't photograph myself but I know how it must be done. You have to be all around to direct a film in Denmark." Co-director with her at present is her longtime friend and script writer, Miss Grete Frische. Miss Frische is a remarkable woman. She told me that once while re cuperating from a long, nervous ordeal at a typewriter she and her mother took a vacation to gether and made a pact neither would speak for eight days. Both women lived up to the pact, she said. RADIO PROGRAMS 28 1240 kr. WEDNESDAY A KFLW 1450 kc. Ileatter MRU Town Forum .: Air ! 11:43 9:011 B:I3 0:30 0:45 10:00 111:19 I0::0 10:15 Breakfast Clob ABC Glamour Manor ABC , Bre'kfasl in Hollywood ABC Kellorfs Homo Edit. ABC Ted MaloneABC My True Story ABC I0:M News A Betty Crocker ABC 11:00 Memorable Music 11:11 Ethel and Albert ABC ll::i0The Llsteninr Post ABC 11:46 Sammy Kaye Orch. Cardenlnf Todav Calrndar of Munlc Victor Afden Orcb," Voice of the Army Glen Hardy, News MBS Jamet Crowley MBS Dance American Leeion New Roundup Concert Hall Mualo As ton Like 11 Jack Birrow Orch. MBR The Feelfnf la Mutual MBg Eddfe Oliver Orcb.MBg New Roundup WEDNESDAY P. IJ:l)0 U:IA IJ::l 12:11 1 :0l) News, Noon Edition Man on the Street Number I'lease Ladles Re Healed ABC Jack BerchABC 1:10 1:1ft 1:30 A to 7. In Novelty Hollywood At Vine ARr I:lft Hymns of all 1:00 2:10 t:3.1 8:30 3:00 ::io S:4S nnat-s Doln dalles ABC Norman NesbltlABC "1430 Club" Bride and Groom ABC Al learc ARC Tunes 4:00 Slim Bryant 4:13 Raymond HwincABC 4:311 Krquestrully Yours 4:43 Hop llarriffan ABC 1:00 Terry and the Pirates ABC 3:13 Dick Tracy ARC B:30Jack Armstrong ABC S:45 8porls Mnrup KFLW f-.lure One reason films can be pro duced cheaply here is that stars can be engaged for considerably less than the war debt. They don't earn as much as a good racehorse does in America. "Our pictures take about two months to make and the most ever paid to a Danish actor for one picture was $4000," she said. Miss Frische thinks American films are popular in Denmark chiefly because Danes "have the same sense of humor. One of your crazy comedies will go over well here. But in Sweden they don't care for it. They don't like to laugh as well." Quick-Draw Holsters Kor Portland Police PORTLAND, May 28 VP) Po lice here will be quicker on the draw in the future, Acting Po lice Chief Leon V. Jenkins said today in announcing cross-draw holsters nn the loft aiAa nr tt,A belt would replace reversible rignt-siae draw holsters. Jenkins explained the change was prompted by action of a madman who snatched a police revolver from officers here when they tried to seize him. The man later killed himself after shoot ing at patrolmen. The color of the shell makes no difference whafAtroi. in th. food value or quality of flavor of ess insiue. M MAY 29 KFJI 1240 kc. Victor H. Mndlabr MBS Lyle Van, News MRS Morton Downey. MBS Morning Matinee Klamath Theatres ' Sews MRS Smile Time MRS Queen for a Day MRS Mitch Ayres Orch. Calendar of Music Orfan Moods Imperial Singers M MAY 29 Melodious Melodies News Your Dance Tunes Farm Front l.lvlnr with God Organ Johnson Family MRS Home Demonstration News Local Zeke Manners MRS John J. Anthony MRI Request Hour Dr. Lewis T. Talbot' Tea Dance Here's How with Pete Howe MBS fullon Lewis Jr. MBS Rex Miller MBS Krsklne Johnson MBS Klamath Theatres Story of Pundevogel Superman MRS Captain Mldnlte MBS Adyent. of Tom Ml MBS KFJI Featora Churches ABC STATIC 4lL As long as the boys in the ABC heaitquurters go on send ing me these pictures 1 might just as well go on printing them. Of course, I suppose it would be better it they would suck io things like yesterday's illustra tion, but since they don't we'll do the best we cnn. Today's pic lured star is Bill Thompson, radio's youngest octogenarian. He's also the star of the Bill Thompson show, busy in there giving Hubert Updyke, 111, a bad time. Tragedy has slackened its hold on the KFLW announcing staff with the return of Chuck Cecil to the fold. Things were in pretty bad shape around here yesterday, what with new babies, missing teeth, grounded pilots and what not. All in all it left the load on Don Neal, Bob IcCal and Larry Probasco, and Neal had his head in the clouds most of the time, any way. Welcome home. Chuck, and I nope you brought a little of the southern sunshine up with you. Fishing season is officially open on Link river for the Peli cans. From an evening view point I've been sitting and watching them all this weekend as they sail up the river, light, and drift down again. They look not unlike a fleet of navy Grum mans coming in to a carrier as they set their wings for the last riffle and sit down in almost per fect formation. Then they drift along down the river, fishing as they go, only to fly up and start it all over again when they pass the last riffle back of the KFPA. It's really a sight worth watching. Soldier Admits Stealing Plane SEATTLE, May 28 ( Ar thur Walter Buttkus, 17, soldier stationed at Fort Lewis, has been arrested- on aji open charge, and has admitted faking part in tne melt ot an airplane early Friday from the Snohomish air port, Police Chief Charles Adams of Snohomish said last night. Buttkus and another soldier took the plane at the other's sug gestion, the youthful serviceman told Adams. The police chief said Buttkus told him the pair became lost and the plane crashed after running out of fuel. Adams reported Buttkus said the other soldier was a student pilot. The officer quoted Buttkus as saying "A wing hit the ground. When I woke up I was hanging upside down and bleeding. We crawled out and walked to a farmhouse and asked which way it was to Seattle." He said the two separated at Monroe, Wash., and Buttkus went to Seattle, where he was picked up by police for being out of uniform. Remodeling Swells Building Permits Small remodeling jobs and ad ditions to homes accounted for $12,245 in building permits for the week of May 20. . Permits granted were for re construction of a foundation, $275, 402 Walnut. R. L. Myers; remodeling, S400. 2210 Vine, Willard H. Graham: remodeling an office. $300, 11th and Oak, William G. Burkhard; addition to residence, $750, 436 Adams, D. P. Liggett; remodeling office, $300, 1415 Main, Howard Burk- head; residence, $5000, Martin and Reclamation, James O'Keefe addition, $2000, 1855 Portland Frank E. Clayton; remodeling. $2000, lot 11, block 201, Mills second addition, Donald Paul Smith; remodeling. $1000. 2124 Radcliffe. M. W. Gibson; lower ceiling, Mode-o-Day shop, $150, BJS Main, (J. Loveloy; and re- roofing, $70, 224 Cook, Melvln rcllana. Classified Ads Bring Results. LISTEN TO KFLWs "TOP TEN for TONIGHT" 6:00 Music of Manhattan 6:45 Tht Flying Public- ABC 7:00 Ed Sullivan ABC 7:30 Malcolm Epley 8:00 Lum and Abnar ABC 8:30 Dark Venture- ABC 9:00 Bob Wills 10:15 Raymond Swing- ABC 10:30 The Doctors Talk It Over ABC 10:45 Ambassador Hotel Orch. The Herald and Newa ABO fJffj7 "0 June School Board Vote On Schedule Two elections for the purpose of miming directors on both school boards 1 and 2, will be held in June. It was announced at a meeting of the boards Mon day night. District No. 1 will have two vacancies. There is a two-year term which at the present is being served by Howard Hum nisei who completed the unex pired term of C. S. K.lliot. This term ends June SO, 1IM8. A five-year term Is also to he filled. This office Is now held by J. H. Schul.e. Petitions are being circulated to have both Burnhisel and Schul.e succeed themselves. In District No. 2, there Is a five-yeur term beginning July 1, 1946, this term now filled by Scott Warren who stepped into the unexpired term of George Ilugelstein, Petitions are also being circulated In Warren's be half. Voters of District No. I will vote at Fremont school Monday, June 17. Voters of District No. 2 will vote at KUHS Monday, June 24. Burnhisel reported to the K,,,,p,4a loot ,i.,l,l tl,t irlt m securing a new junior high school site was progressing fa- i ,mrni,iu n,,H nrii..p H.itftiia ! would be announced later Members of the boards, as a regular sequence of business, canvassed the recent vote and a resolution was adopted to put tlie results in Immediate opera tion. The matter of setting up building programs incorporated in the new budgets wns dis cussed and plans made to start work as sooty as possible. Both boards reported plans for the summer school programs. The KUHS program went Into effect yesterday, Monday, and the grade school summer session will get under way at Fremont next Monday, June 3. The Fre mont schedule will be an nounced this week. Mrs. Puul O. Landry was named director of cafeterias in both districts. Three persons were added to the KUHS facul ty, according to Superintendent Arnold L. Gralupp. Paul MeCall, major in industrial arts and a graduate of Bradley Polytech nic, Peoria, 111., was named to an industrial arts assignment; Mae Lorcnzen. graduate of Oregon State college, 1948, was named tq a commercial assignment, and Mrs. Exene Humble of this city, will take a social science ap pointment. The boards extended to the summer recreation committee use of the same' buildings and the swimming pool as used lust year. Harold Tcalc, director of vo cational education, reported on l.the veterans apprenticeship pro- cram to bring the board up-to- date on the operation of that set up. Shirley Parsons, graduate of the school of music. Whitman college, Walla Walla, Wash., was named to a music assignment in the elementary schools. Post Office Reports Mails Normal Again . The Klamath Falls post office, which suffered along with other branches of the service during last week's nationwide rail strike, reported today a normal influx of mail and everything was back where it was before the strike. R. L. Griffith, assistant post master, said Monday that a huge amount of second, third and fourth class mail was to be ex pected Tuesday but this failed to materialize and the influx will probably reach here from the east Wednesday morning. Ainsworth Remains In Same Condition The condition of John "Tex" Ainsworth, in Klamath Valley hospital for treatment of gunshot wounds, remains aoout tne same" as yesterday when he was reDorted to be Improving Ainsworth was shot five times in the abdomen and chc.it in a fight with Glen Harris last Thursday. Harris died Thursday night of stab wounds received in the fight. Memorial Services The Loyal Order of Moose. No. 1108, chap ter 467. will hold memorial ser vices Thursday at 8 p. m., not 9 p. m. as was previously an nounced. Services will be held in the Moose hall. The public is invited, Sea ducks whole. swallow shellfish i DON'T MISS "MAIL FUN" WITH DON NEAL OVER Wednesday Noon, 1 2:30 "6 Pounds of Butter" -k Stricken Y TV r, t.,n. -jri Sonata cotton bloc leader, Senator John H, Bankhead, (D). Alabama, 73, was stricken 111 while attending a meeting of the senate banking committee In Washington. D. C. NEA telephoto. Fired Worker Slays Bosses INGLKWOOD, Calif May 28 T' discharged worker at the J. C. Penney department store returned lo nil) csiuuiisinucin here lute yesterday, shot iintl killed the nutniiKer antl assistant malinger, und then wits niiirtiilly wounded in a gun buttle with po lice, officers reported. Police Capt. llenry Stevenson said the former employe, Paul Joseph Dohiinyos, 35, had been discharged n month iiko. Hurry lliimmerliind, the iniuiiigtT, itiul Maurice Knudseii, assistant man ager, were shot In their office on the me.jiiiiiue floor. Other employes called police and Officers Dick Shoemaker, Ted llewsnn and Frank Hunyon called to Dohiinyos to give him self up. Instead, he fired, and 18 shots were exchanged before Uohanyns fell, a bullet in his head. Walls, ceilings nnd parti, tions were pocked by bullets, but two women employes on the mezzanine floor. Ilillie Wheeler and Krina Ralphs were not hurt. Police said a letter found in Dohiinyos' pocket Indicated he believed himself the victim of persecution in the store. Rainbow Girls Hold Induction TULELAKK. Muv 28 New officers of the Tulelake assem bly, Order of the Halnhow for Girls, will be Inducted Wednes day night, May 20, In open In stallation. Installing officers are Mary Robertson, retiring worthy advisor; Mrs. Karl Gentry, In stalling organist; Bemlce Hart ley, installing chaplain. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Keller will offer a musical number. The meeting will be called at 8 o'clock in the annex of the Tulelake Com munity Presbyterian church. Officers to be Installed will be Pat Klrksy, worthy advisor; Helen Stoddard, associate wor thy advisor: Mildred Rcld, char ity; 1'rivllis Howan, hope; Jeri Lou Wilson, faith; Shirley Mc Fall, love; Jean Victorine, re ligion; Carla Main, nature; Lou Ann Terry. Immortality. Piitsv Terry, fidelity: Peggy Terry, patriotism; Shirley Main, serv ice; Jancil Boyd, confidential ob server; outer observer, Mar Jorle King; drill lender. Shirley Heck; chnplain, Dale Smith; mu sician, Rosalie Wilkinson; choir director, Joanne Stoysknl. Mrs. Alice Wilkinson is mother ad visor. C. Of C. Organizes Basin Rates Bureau A Klnmnlh bnsln rntcs bureau was orgnnized as a separate unit of the Klamath County chnmber 01 commerce Monday night, electing George P. Davis of Lorenz company as president. J. L. Hicks of the Klamath med ical service wns elected vice president and E. H. Thompson of the U. S. National bank as treasurer. The object of organizing the bureau is to obtain better freight rates to and from the Klamath basin, according to Paul Taylor, traffic manager. Action will be taken by the bureau, he said, to oppose the 18 per cent Increase on motor-carrier rates to become effective June 1. The first woman U. S. repre sentative was Jcancttc Rankin of Montana. ttlSAID A NKWS. KlamalU rails, Ort, Survey Asks For Hospital At Alturas TULKLAKK, May 28 F.stau llshmeul of a hospital ill Alluras mid public health centers at Tulelake, Surprise valley nntl A1 In wits recommended today liy two prominent physicians of the bay men named by Gov, Knrl Warren to survey the hospi tal situation in northern Califor nia counties. l)r, Albert Glllman, Sim Fran cisco, mid Dr. Kourk, chief sur geon of Stanford Lime hospltul, met lit Altiirns last night with the Modoc planning board and gave their rei'tiuiiueiidiitlnns. The mutter wus turned over to District Attorney Chuiles Leder er of Modoc county to work out legal details. Slate and govern iiu'iil financial assistance Is ex pected, Formation of u hospital dis trict to Include Modoc county und parts of Siskiyou and Lassen counties was discussed. If this is done, people of the district will elect a lion I'd which will se lect a superintendent. Chester Main attended I ho Modoc planning council meeting .it Alliiriis to consider the mut ter with Drs. Gllhunn und Itoark. Hurry Kduerton of Atlln will canvass public Interest In the Atlin nnd Uig Valley urea. George Offield Dies In Merrill (Continued from Puge One) 18 years he curried on this busi ness und finally opened u retail meat market, also doing n whole sale business tif buying unci ship ping slock to the city markets. Population Was 350 Mr. Offield enjoyed reminis cing on the history of Klumulh county. He first arrived In this section when Llnkvllle, now Kliimuth Falls, hail a population of ubout 2511 persons und the only other town wus the new one of llonunr.a. When Merrill began to grow, he associated himself with others in Incorporating the town. With his other interests he served us secretary nntl treas urer of the Van llrlmmrr Ditch company for 17 years. Mr. Offield was long a member of the Merrill Service club, for 20 years served as mayor of Merrill, 10 years ns Justice o( the pence of Hint district, u direc tor of the county school board for six years, wus president of the Klnmnth Wnler Users' usso, ciutlon, which becnine the Klam ath Irrigation District, fur a period of seven yeurs; director and vice president of the First National bunk of Merrill for nearly 13 years, and wus pust grand of the Tuleliike lodge, IOOF. One of the most active workers in the Presbyterian church of Merrill, wus the lute Mr. Offield. He was prominent in the early days of the church and continued his affilialiun throughout his life time, i Mr. Offield Is survived by his wife, Mary Winnifred, to whom : he was married at Hound Luke, i in Klumuth county, on October 1, 1HDU. They4ind nine children, eight of whom 11 rt. now living. All but one of the daughters, j Mrs. Walter Cluley of Morres-j town, N. J will attend final rites Wednesday al 2 p. in. from the' Merrill Presbyterian church. Ar-i rungements nre being made by j Wlullock's. Other survivors arc 1 Mrs. Fred Fletcher, Mrs. Joe j Wright and Lester Offield, all of i Klamath Fulls; Mrs. K. C. liurkes, Mrs. Frank Hunnlcutt, Mrs. Thomas Harry nnd Mrs. Funnette Hodges, Merrill, Tug Leaves Portland For Wrecked Tanker SEATTLE, May 28 Ml The tug Sand Key Is due to leave Porllund, Ore., Thursday for Adnk in the Aleutians to pick up the stern section of the Amer ican tanker Suckctts Harbor, which broke in two in a storm March 1 without loss of a man. The tug will tow the hulk to Scuttle. Ten men from the ves sel's original crew arc still aboard, protecting the derelict und its cargo of oil. Aftar the fir li a poor tlms to insure. Before is to much more satisfactory. Hans Norland, 123 N. 6th St. TOMORROW NIGHT! ADVENTURE STARTS whan tht IONE RANOER gosi lute action In onothtr axcltlng tplioclt of lh famous Wslttrn Mrltl . . , hard riding advtnluro mlxsd with thrills, spills and good old two gun drama thai tvarybody Itndl an oar to. Time li 6:00 P. M. KFLW 14110 on your Slat American Broadcasting Company V tiimdat, mar , mi, rut rr Tolling The MUlUor tetter (wbttttf hr muet net tee mere then ito wot tie in Ifiiiih, muet be mhi le leiiblf on ONI tlUI er the m.i WHlp. end muet be .ertt. OMlftbuttewt ltiiirt iimm rule, are wei-mle wet- rnOM MR. HECTOR KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., (To the K.illlor)-1 wish lo lake this oppoitunlly lo oiler my thanks and uppiei'lullou to the voters tit Kluniulh county for their slip, port in my recent cumpalgn (or tin olflte of county surveyor. I also wish to coiigrutulitle Frank , Howard on his success, Ymii's very truly, WALLY M. IIKC'lOlt, County Engineer, OPEN THOSE HE ADC ATES TULKLAKK, Ciillf.. (To the Ktlltor) Coiignituliillniis on the two full'PUKo nils In Weiliii'atluy's paper; they should he fnuiicd us the edition of comics tor the year. During this thy spring I could havtt gone out Into my field and shouted lo the sky what I thought of It for not bringing the usual showers lo start things off and anyone passing would have said, "you poor assKlfd uspect of atrophied ignorance, you hitvti the finest sort of Irrigation sys tems, open that headgatn and start producing " Production is what It takes In stead of these specious argu ment shouted by each side. In his heart eneli knows thorn words lire to convince himself, while shouting to the sky, that he still has good sense. . All Industry lias fine systems analogous to Irrigation, but these fellows would rather slnnd around the headgate and pre. tend they are convincing each other the gate shouldn't be raised. Yours for more laughs. CI.YDF. K. MOOHK. KFD '.MM, Tulelake. Calif. Memorial Day Closes Offices Practically all business nitiv. Ily In Klninuth Fulls will ecru on Thui'Mltiy. Meiuorlui Onv. The Herald nnd News will not publish In ob.servunce of the day. l.oeiil business houses will close their tloors In nrcordance with a decision by the Klamath Mer chants assoclution that Its mem bers would close. There will be no city or rtirnl mull deliveries, nnd nil windows unci offices In tile post office will be rinsed. ' Kederul building of fices will also close. Also closing nre the city and county libraries, the city hull, the courthouse, county schuols, blinks, nnd the liquor store. Tots Skate Shoes Teaches Balance And Poise! As the name implies, this is a combination skote and shoe and can be worn without shoes. It Is designed for the tiny tot, too young to use roller skates. it Thev do not scratch tht floor as the rollers are made of soft fibre with steel ax les, genuine leather, and quality workmanship. 11 sizes from which to make your selection. Drop Into Miller's Downstairs Store and inspect this new Item. Infants' Dopt. Downstairs Stor 1 t r