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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1946)
$t rat an?! THANK ir.NKUit MALCOLM M"- gdlWf eieiieslns Kduor KnUrad eeoood clM aiatlw it the PMtofflc of KlemelS) rill Oil. cm August so. 104. uaa act e( coci March I, 1ST SUBSCRIPTION RATON Mih ai no Bv mall . fly carrier , B' mall jaoolh 11. UO By mail . Today's Roundup Br MALCOLM EPLEY ROCK SPRINGS. Wyo. -(Travel Correspond encc) Night before last we stayed at the Hunters lodge In Lakeview, Ore. Tonight, we're put up at a little hotel called the Plata in Rock Springs, Wyo. In the two days of intervening travel we made a wide circle into Utah for a look at beautiful Salt Lake City. Modern transportation gets you places, even on the ground. When we left Mountain Home, Ida., early this morn ing, we intended to come di rectly into Wyoming by Po- EPLEY catello. But just iv, where the road forks to Salt Lake, the younger member of the party advanced strong ijrgumcnU for the southward swing, and we ook it It wasn't much farther, and well Worth the added distance to visit Utah's teem j)ig capital. TODAY'S travel through the open spaces was much like that of yesterday high desert, irrigated valleys, an occasional busy little city. Our bigger town visit yesterday was also paid to a state capital Boise. Today it was Salt take. Tomorrow it will be Cheyenne, another capital. ! Coming east from Mountain Home this morn ing, we stopped at Twin Falls to look up Bob Leonard, one-time sports editor of The Herald and News and now assistant editor of the Twin Falls Telegram. That's a morning paper, and he works at night. Nobody on the early morn ihg day side knew where he lived, so we left a note and rolled on eastward. J It was a bright, cool day in Salt Lake. We Walked through the capitol building, on a hill Overlooking the city of trees and impressive buildings; we toured the University of Utah campus, and we did the grounds of the Mormon tabernacle. That's doing our gawking in a ljurry, but it was packed with interest. I Coming out of Salt Lake on US 40, we rjaused at the spot where Mormon leaders first looked upon that valley and found it good. Then we went on into the canyon in the yv'asatch mountains where No. 40 shares a Harrow defile with a railroad track. There were times when the track was virtually on tie highway; had there been a train, it might 4 ell have become mixed up in the traffic which was plenty heavy through there this afternoon, j J Leaving No. 40 on a state highway, we lejoined US 30 S at Echo valley, j North into Wyoming, and into Fort Bridger, tamed as an early day trading post and emi grant stop. We were late, but we stopped and tisited the museum there, and we advise other travelers not to miss it. The maps and relics f the Old West would be worth a full day's inspection. Their interest U enhanced by the building and the location, which comprise per fect "atmosphere." 1 !a LL along the way we had been reading f signs about a place called "Little America" at Granger, inviting us to stop for dinner and i good bed. We got the dinner but somebody lse had gotten our bed. IWe. are reminded of an experience of a rela ive on the Coast highway. For 75 miles, she aid, she read signs about a whale. Whale 73 miles. Whale 74 miles, etc. She approached the last mile with mounting Suspense. !At last, she was there, and looked discon olately upon a sign which read: NO WHALE. There was no bed at Little America, so we foiled on into Rock Springs, got a good hotel loom without trouble and that bed over there looks mighty inviting.- Telling The Editor letter print ad Mr man oat ka marl than 11 amrda in length, asuet b am Im le(ibi on ONI tlDl at tha a ear ante, end muet be elgned, Cotttribtrttese lellonlng thee ruita. are warmly 1 RED HAND SEEN The Editor, The Herald and News, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sir: t me unio iarm siriKe against PA is one encouraging picture an America where freedom id democracy are being stran- led by a spider web of bureau- oratic red tape spun by commun- . ana wan aireei monopolists, combination no stranger than Hitler-Stalin naeU The OP A serves the reds in liquidating the farmers and lit tle business as did Stalin's lia- idation of the farmers and m i ri al e class in Russia. It serves the internationalists in robbing the THURSDAY EVE., JUNE tfCFLW 1450 kc KFJI 9 :fW Selen Concert :1ft Home Town Newt f :miH World New Sarnrnery i:X0 Detect end Collect ABC fe:A5 Sporti by Wleraer ABC 5:00 Radio Playboaee 1:15 " t:0 Allen Roth Orcu. 1:13 Carton Bobiion 1:00 Lum 'N Abner ABC Earl Godwin ABC Mo Town Meeting ABC 1:1 ::0 n red line; Match I:;I0 AmuisRador lf:0t.fli Off linn :U r FRIDAY A. M JUNE :30 Dawn Petrol Waken iei-arra Fare :00Newe Dalit. Edition :IBStop end Go show :MJamee Alibe Observes ABO :iSZrk Mannrra ABC i j Th, Break(aitu clab ABO J M too Glamour Minor ABO tCn dlamoar Manor ABO it Dklil. in Bollywood ABO BeAmof The News WASHINGTON, June 27 The CIO-PAC was greatly weakened in the primaries, and congress paid no attention to it, in plan ning its program for its coming elections. CIO had a legislative program, but it was largely rejected. This is the political force which form erly ran the town and the country. the excuse bemg offered inside for this con dition is that CIO was always overrated, and in the primaries to date, did not spend the money attributed to it, when It threatened to clean out congress. How much money was spent by CIO, no one yet knows, but as to the overrating, there is tome evidence. The union organization claimed the govern orship of Alabama, but lost a representative, and was commonly judged to have broken about even there, its best state. In California it lost everything, and elsewhere it was not much of direct primary issue. A few representatives were beaten but not on the CIO issues, which probably also suffered defeat internationally in Nebraska. Pat Cannon was beaten for re-election from Miami, because he is supposed to have been ditched by the Pepper ICIO?) machine there but a former governor was elected senator who will not be with Senator Pepper. CIO's Birmingham man, Luther Patrick, was defeated. Folger lost In North Carolina but on other issues. I have seen a tabulation insisting CIO lost much more. Hold Greatly Weakened THUS its hold on the democratic party has been greatly weakened outside the White House among the people running this year. In the White House lit has been charged,) Mr. Tru man went thoroughly CIO in his strike settle ments and blockade of union legislation, par ticularly his veto of the Case bill. It was also charged he was cleared with Sidney (Hillman of CIO) at the Chicago convention where he was nominated for the vice-presidency. To whatever extent this Is true, it deepens " democratic situation, which now is: democratic congressmen are not running on the Hillman platform and popular results so far seem to justify their judgment. This was inevitable. CIO had an inflationary program for congress, which could not be ac cepted. Internationally, it preached and prac ticed appeasement of Russia, or more, and this did not work either, the times passed it by. Some inner suggestions have been made she is now reforming and reorganizing econ omically and internationally to try to get up to what appears to be a new bandwagon. To get something going which will capture the imagination of the country. For this, it may be too late. Even whether Mr. Truman can run on a CIO program two years from now is currently questioned. He will have to face the strike gauntlet again next year, John L. Lewis and his coal miners (now in AFL) really got the only complete victory, and all they wanted from his government. The Railroad Brother hood (AFL) got less, and the steel and auto workers (CIO) are torn with internal dissension over the settlements, and strife is apparent. Certainly CIO has not purged itself of com munists as the British socialists did. a Change In Two Years THE, whole situation will be changed within two years, and there may be a question of what union ticket Mr. Truman will care to run on. This also bears marks of inevitability. Cor rective union reform legislation can hardly be blocked forever. Events are taking their course. You cannot have a super-government with vast funds, even by churches, much less unions, and still maintain any kind of democracy except the Russian kind, under the thumb of that power. Some unioneers, like Dubinsky, are already talking of a third party union move ment, which would be against CIO as much as anything else. This is the course the unions months MM eer M OO outside Bur- take in England, ist government. not agreed, Americans of a rising standard of living in order to use Amer- iran ffnnria in KrtKina rnraiirn na tions to adhere to the cause of me sruisn empire. There are plenty of automo- hilna nvlnn ,ln in Uavini. Central America and South nmerica, as every traveler knows. The OPA is as big a swindle as the New Deal itself. It has not kept down the cost of living, as anyone can see for himself. It has retarded production and been a potent factor in making inflation an ever present threat nor little business has benefitted by OPA. During the First World War, ltfhpn th Amori-an nannla in the iron grip of the Wilson dictatorship, Lord Rothmere, the British publisher, said, "The Americans are a docile people." Winston Churchill said that President Wilson hoped to make himself world dictator and that It UnilM kav. haan helln ra ttle peace of the world if we had nept out 01 world war One, RADIO PROGRAMS 27 1240 kc. Bkfit In Hollvwoo.1 ABC Gabriel Heatter MBS Areand Town tt Koortimen Trtarart Boar of floor MB Voyaso r Discovery Lee Brown Orrh. Bed Ryder MBS Olaf'a Cosnlrr ttere Vic St Ride MR. Glenn Hardy, N ewe MB Jamea Crawler. N'ewa MRS to cencl. Wrestling Hatches 10 M 10:12 10:30 10:45 Kelloir'a Home Words St Music Mr True Story 10:55 News it Bettr 11:00 11:10 11:15 11:30 UM Stop St Shop Men of Note Ethel and Albert ABO The Listening Post ABC Sammy Kayo Orch. 15:00 News Noon i.:i.t.nan on Ibe Street" W Ld.-e Be Stated ABC Muile Ai Yob Like It Lawrence Welk Orrh. MBf Xavier Curat Orch. MB 8 N'ewa Roundup MBS 1:00 1:15 1:30 1:40 Jack Berrb ABC Memorable Music Hollywood and 1:4 Hymns ef all Chnrchcs ABC :00 2:15 z;i:, 2:30 :4S 1:00 S::t0 8:1,1 4:00 4:1.1 4:S 4:4 " " umia LaaiCS ABU Norman Nesbitl ABC 1430 Club Bride and Groom ABC AI fear co Frank Jenkins Requestfully Yours Hon Harrlro n ARC! 28 Tunes Morning Reveille F. Heminfwar, News MBS Rise and Shine MBS Headline News Best Buys Island Melodies Fashion Flashes Take It Easy Time MB I Victor IT. Llndlahr. Health Aids MBS Lyle Van, News MRS The Coke Club MBS Moraine Matinee 0.00 ft:IA 8:30 5:45 Terry and the Pirates ABC Dick Tracy ABC Jack Armstrong ABC Sports Lineup KfLW Feature to approximate a union social But other union leaders are wanting inflation in the older parties in a less ostentatious or costly way (such as AFL has developed since Gompers.) However, the coal strike and settlement badly mauled Mr. Lewis who was wanted for such a purpose. All I can accurately report now is that the democratic future Is unsettled, and may be determined to a considerable extent in the coming November elections. which was none of our business. Franklin Roosevelt, too, fell prey to the same lust for world power. His New Deal facism was essential in his bid for world power. Fortunately, for us, God had other ideas. Franklin Roosevelt, like Woodrow Wilson, died of a stroke. Even the tired, bull frog voice of Wendell Willkie croak ing incessantly of a "One World" was silenced in the dust of the grave. American democracy is mid dle class, capitalistic. It cannot survive under any form of eco nomics except that of free enter prise. The Babbits of Main street have obvious faults, but the mid dle class is the only class which has not enslaved other elements in society. Certainly the OPA is- slow strangulation to the little busi nessman. Hence poison to demo cracy. Yours truly, ELMER BENNETT. Classified Ads Bring Results, FRIDAY A. M., JUNE 28 Klamath Theatres Edit. ABC ABC ABC Glenn Hardy. News MBS Smile Time MBS Queen fot a Day MBS Crocker ABO Orraa Recital Morning Songs Cencert Pros-ram Kennell'EIIIs FRIDAY P. M., JUNE 28 Edition Melodious Melodies Headline News Your Dance Tunes Iarm Front and Market Kt. ports Living With God Johnson family MRS Jerry Sears Strings .Navy Recruiting News Zek Manners MBS John J. Anthony MBS ' Rlckyi Reqaest Dr. Louis T. Talbot Tea Dance Here's How MBS Fulton Lewis Jr, News MBS Re Miller, News MRS Krsklne Johnson MRS Klamath Theatre Time Fairy Tale Superman MRS Captain Midnight MBS Tens Mix MBs KFJI Feature Vino ABC SIDE GLAHCSS wa. i ov im mwm. wc. t a "Tell me something nbmit the Wagner Act, Cicorj!e were having a political debute at our clubl It's ome tliiiifi ubout music, isn't it?" STATIC Starting at 5:15 on Monday afternoon KFLW will present a cowboy kid show to end all cowboy kid shows. The man in question is Jed Sloan, the yo delling cowboy "deadliest man with a rifle in the old west." Sloan is currently played by Elton Britt, an Oklahoma boy and well-known for his athletic Adams apple. Although falling Into the Dead Eye Dick and An nie Oakley class with a shootin' iron, the "Tennessee Cowboy" (the name of the show, by the way) believes firmly that all real he-men settle arguments with their fists. He settles a few, with his fists, with some of the most notorious outlaws ever known on radio. Further au thenticity is lent the program by the inclusion in the staff of a full-blooded Indian and a native Mexican. a a Drove over to Medford yes terday, and found the highway over Parker, Hayden and the Greensprings mountains as beau tiful as it always is this time of year. After the rains every thing is washed clean, the bushes gleam in the sunlight and there's a clean smell to the air. The difference in climate was marked, going from the almost cold air of 4000 feet to trie mug gy valley heat. Saw no wild game along the way, unless you count two dead porkics, but the ground around Tub springs was lousy with deer tracks. It al ways is right up until open scav son. Medlord was turned out en masse to look over the ruins of their history making fire. More co m p 1 e t e destruction would be hard to imagine. It must have looked familiar to the boys from the ETO. One flat and one blowout on the way home, which is a pretty good average these days. a I think that at long last I've solved the problem of why we have so many flats on the high way. No matter where you go you see homemade trailers go ing their merry, and noisy, way. People sat around for four war years and built them out of any thing they could find. Now, with gas end tires again, they're hitting the roads again, and shedding nails all over the place. One chap I was follow ing yesterday lost about half the rear of his trailer due to the nails and screws giving way, and never even knew it. a a The Klamath basin is certain ly paying for the nice May weather. Looks like the higher gods have decreed that we shall have nothing but one wind storm after another for the re mainder of the summer. About LISTEN !! to tha Westinghouse Program Mon. thru Fri. 10:15 . 10:30 a. m. KFLW 1430 K.C, Chroma Dinctfa Chain 7.45 Choice of Red, Blue or Black Leatherette Cover ing. H after Furniture 9th and Klamath em. u Prowlers Rob Parked Auto Attendants at the Elk garage, 11th and Klumath, reported to city police this morning that car belonging to Ray Girard of the Holly hotel was prowled some time after midnight while it was parked outside the ga rage. They noticed this morning that the rear trunk compart ment of the car had been pried open and Girard reported that four new sheets, eight pillow cases, a new hydraulic bumper jack and some car tools are missing. The city jail at present has only two residents, temporarily, and three trusties, although 1993 arrests have been made to date this year, compared to 1481 by June 27 of last year. Truman Orders WRA Terminated WASHINGTON, June 27 W) President Truman has ordered the termination of the war re location authority, effective June 30. This agency handled the housing of Japanese aliens who were removed from the west coast. . The president directed Inter ior Secretary Krug to wind up the affairs of the authority. Demonstration Agent Has Sugar Booklets One of the biggest problems facing the housewife this sum mer is the stretching of sugar supplies to take care of canning and daily needs. Booklets con taining detailed instructions on sugar preservation in canning, freezing and cooking can now be obtained at the home demon stration agent's office. Bulletins are also on file which instruct the homemaker in the use of corn syrup and honey in place of sugar. Tips on which berries can be canned without sugar and how to use the natural sugars of the fruit will prove invaluable to the housewife. Pamphlets on the canning, salting and freezing of foods are also available for anyone wish ing them. Advertising Manager Visits Klamath Falls Paul West Jr., manager of West-Holllday, Portland, spent Thursday in Klamath Falls on business. West's firm is the na tional advertising representative of The Herald and News. Mrs. West accompanied her husband to this city and they left late today for Medford. This Is West's first trip here In a number of years. He was re leased from the United States navy In mid-January after serv ing during war years as chief storekeeper. what'll happen Is that the weather will not only clear up soon, but there won't be a breath of wind for a month. DON'T MISS KFLW's "TOP TEN for TONIGHT" 5:45-Sports Lineup 8:00-Stlon Concert 6:IS-Homatown News 8:30-Detct It Collect, ABC 6i5i-Wismer Sports, ABC 7i00-Radlo Playhouse 7:45-Carson Robinson l:00-Lum 'n Abner, ABC 8i30-Town Meeting, ABC. 9:30-Wrestling The Herals ana Neof -f ABO K.FltW "M KC Driver Dies Of Injuries From Plunge YREKA. June 27 (Special) Critically Injured Sunday morn ing when the car he was driv ing plunged over a 350-foot em bankment Into the Shasta river on highway B, five miles north of Yrrkn, Rdwurd T. Jiiucmnii. 76, of I.o Angeles, died Miindav iVMllii(t ul 7-4. n m n CI. 1.1...... County General hnxpltal here. iic wiu rusnca io ine naipunl by ambulance nhortly afier the crash which occurred at 8 a, m. Sunday. Jagerson's wife, Laura, 52, the nnlv nlliMi- nn,,t,,k,,l ti J..il. w-.. )', ,t Ill-Mill car, suffered cuts about the head ana otner injuries, none of which was considered serluus. A shoo KalcMiunn, Jngrrnon, was en route home to Los An geles from a business trip Into Oregon, when he lost control of his car in a curve oi) the wet. slippery highway and his car plummeted down into Shasta river canyon. The driver and his wife were thrown clear of the automobile and onto the river bank before the vehicle came to rest In the middle of the stream. The car was totally de molished. Skull Fractured Jagerson's death Monday was attributed to a basal skull frac ture and other severe Injuries. The bodv will h aMutwl in Glendalc, Calif., Thursday night wiicn u is Dcucvca tnal Mrs. Jngersou will be able to travel. Funeral services and entomb ment will take place there. In addition to his widow, Jag- erson is alirvivftri hv fnnt kmtt,. ers, John S. and Albert E. Jager- son or iMeonnn. wis., Gilbert It. Jiigerson of Granite Fulls, Wash., and Oscar C. Jagerson of Hone burg, Ore. Also one niece and two nephews. He was a native of Nccnah, Wis., where he was born Sep tember 28. 18(19. An Inquest into the accident victim's death was conducted Wednesday afternoon in Yrcka by Siskiyou County Coroner Alois Turner. Plywood Bonus Payments Out PORTLAND, June 27 AI Approved quota applications for plywood premium payments arc in the mails to 22 Oregon and western Washington ply wood firms, an Inter-agency committee reported here today. The payments, designed to stimulate plywood production, are on the basis of $7.50 a thou sand feet log scale, payable by the firms to peeler log suppliers as a subsidy. If the firms expand ''produc tion at least 25 per cent above their quotas, they will be re imbursed for Uie subsidy pay ments. Quotas, set by the com mittee after a meeting with northwest operators, are gener ally at the first quarter 1938 output rate. Mills whose output increases only slightly above their quotas, will receive pro portionate refunds. Dale Hunsaker Wins Willamette Degree Dale Hunsaker, son of Ray L. Hunsaker of 2975 Summers lane, will receive his bachelor of sci ence degree In biology from Wil lamette university at Salem on June 30. Bishop O. Bromley from New York will be the speaker at the commencement exercises. Hunsaker attended Willamette for two years under the navy V-12 plan and returned this fall when he was discharged to com plete his training. He is an ac tive member in the Independent Men's Organization on the cam pus. Four Measles Cases Reported Last Week Measles led communicable dis eases in the county for the week ending June 15, with four cases being reported, One case each of chicken pox, mumps, smallpox, and malaria was also reported. Measles led in the state with 166 cases. KIRBY Vacuum Cleaners Aalherlital latee and ferric fttB N. lSlh fhone 4li, 1451, er A2SS STARTING Next Week! 4B The ftoWn Bin T KPLYy 1450 cn your d'1 MONDAY THKU FRIDAY For boyi and girls, and grown-ups who don't want to grow oldf The MerelS end Newe lieaAI.D KW, Hleiu.Ui Oi. CARNIVAL Q:CL!SI ,m r wt oiover. T u eio u hr'ntt ' "I've been trnclinii nl Pell!rircw, poultry limine recently I've hud au imii'h more luck with the winliboncs!" x Century Pageant Plans swing Into Full Stride Plans fur the Klamuth Cen tennlul celebration, slated for Augu.nl 22, 23 and 24, in com memoration of the opening of th southern route Into Oregon, are getting Into full stride. A live-part pageant, crammed with historical events In the building of sutithcrn Oregon, from early emigrant days to prcucnt times, will he the mulii event of the celebration. The pageant will be prenented ruch of the three nights at the (ulr groumls and will be directed by Horace W. Robinson, dra matlcs detriment, University of Oregon. Outline of the mimical, mov ing drama to use approximate ly 2000 people Is shaping up and those interested In partici pating are urged to watch the newspaper for registration dates. Players of musical in struments, dancers and horse back riders will be used In the pageant and parade. Anyone having costumes or material for such, articles used by early settlers and relics of pioneer days, is requested to loan them for the occasion. In surance will be carried to cover valuable pieces loaned, accord ing to Charles R. Stark, busi ness manager of the Centennial association. Indians To Assist With the cooperation of Hal Ogle, superintendent of Klam ath Forest Protective associa tion, and Clyde James, mana ger of the farm labor office, Mrs. Geneva Duncan, associa tion president,, has contacted In dians on the adjacent Klamath reservation for the use of au thentic costumes and the In dians have been extended a spe cial Invitation to participate. Cordial Invitations have also been extended to all cities and communities In southern Ore gon to cooperate with talent and suggestions for this grand celebration. Entry applications may be made as soon as regis tration is opened. Main street and all down town businesses will don ap propriate gay decorations and key personnel of the associa tion, business personnel and the public will wear costunios of the early days, well In advance of the celebration. Deadline for clean-shaven chins will be an nounced later, after which tho male population will be dis HOTELS OSB0RN HOLLAND iuor.Ni our.. Mroroao Thoroughly Modern Mr. aa Hre, 1. t. Eerier eat .e Eerier rreprielera I INVISIMINT 'CUTIPICATIS, ' Pmprilm on rtiuol from Printipal UiuUnmln INVESTORS SYNDICATE MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA MARTIN A. PUTNAM Phono 6218 Klamath Falls, Ore. Till aallAr. Jane , l. roe .., By Dick Turner guised behind bushy boards, competing In the whlnkcrlno for the thickest, longest and innat luxurleiil growths. lulcrcallng details of tlx whlskurino are forthcoming. As plans now stand, out street, or several blocks In mmi downtown section, will be re constructed to represent a fron tier town, Here will be inuelc and guyety, bouths fur buying and selling, fortunes, gumrs and "snnke-blto medicine." These conces-iious will probably be managed by various lodges and societies. Klnmuih KuJIs hotels, motor courts and restaurants are pre paring to accommodate all vis itors to the celebration, extend ing tho welcome for which this city has become far fumed. Pri vate families with extra rooms to rent during the Jubilee are requested to list them with the chamber of commerce together with the number of persons to be taken care of. The success of the coining celebration depends upon the cooperation of Individuals, ur gunlzatlous. communities and counties, Stark pointed out, and with such cooperation an event to rival anything in the history of Oregon can be produced. Advertisements Out Soon .Slickers, posters and bulle- i tins, using the design submitted 1 by Kenneth McLeod Jr., will be available at the Klamath County chamber of commerce, as temporary headquarters, ai soon as they are off the press. A tentative program sched ule of events Includes: August 10, Centennial costume dance; August 17, street dance; August 22 children's parade In the morning: noon pioneer picnic at Moore park featuring pio neers and their families from outlying communities and near by counties, with recognition for the oldest pioneer from each area. Bring family lunches and musical instruments. Games and contests In the afternoon, Pa geant at fairgrounds in the tve n I n g; August 23, pageant at fairgrounds In the evening; Au gust 24, grand parade In the morning. Grand finale of pa geant at fairgrounds Irv the evening. H :r,--:rd Wood H 1 '-" l Phone Venetian Blinds Patterson Furniture 230 Main Yes, Sir . . . That's The Good Word - HARWIN'S I