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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1948)
ACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 194S i : HELD OVER!! GREGORY DOROTHY JOHN PECK-McGUIRE -GARFIELD in Laura Z. Hobson'f Agreement y Aeodemy Award Win Mll.!.' today 1 1 ConUnnoui Daily From 1:30 P. M. VlH I Aherne in "beloved enemy" t WWtttTtSt i Times Today jU I ' I i I 1 I tJ) JAMES STEWART in 1 e... h. ".".4. .. 'CALL NORTHSIDE 777' igSJ TOMORROW I I Booster Hotshot in t III N I I I "IDAHO" - " 111 O I' "II "I BOUGHT THIS WOMAN... AND , Hft.l'U. KILL THE MAN WHO TOUCHES HER!" u r.ourm8 TToreri ljlV rti 'oramounl presents ( rr Slave Auction. Where A Man Of Ssfi WiN AliY Aft Destiny Buys A Ciri With Crimson 6? M f TTfTTh err lMv-V VOOPEl V L L The Whipping A The Stake ... Soft I D --V m w Tw. mt OLL White Flesh Before The Stinging lash I L. IP) Jj(&Y yy fAULETTE I ! Produced ana Wee Id by 1 $ ' .1 i ; ; j' p TO SEE! - JTL-Ij" LJ TODAY PELICAN J- ! I For the First Time at Regular Admission I 1 Inspection Station For Grain Vetoed Grain growers ot the Klamalh and Tulclake areas, meeting Wednesday afternoon at the city hall, voted against setting up a train Inspection station here, A majority of the growers pmrnl voiced opinion! thai buyers are competing for barley rropi and should do the Job of in spection. Some felt that having the Inspec tion and grading done here instead of al terminal markets would lessen the competition from buyers and possibly lessen the chance for prem ium prices. The proposal was for the estab lishment of a state grading station here that would set grades on indi vidual shipments of barley and thereby determine the price before the grain was shipped. About 50 growers attended the meeting, .pre sided over by Ralph Hill of Henley, and virtually all voted against the station. Eisler Sentenced To 2-3-Year Term WASHINGTON. March 35 uPl Gerhard Eisler. alleged "No. 1 com munist" in the United Slates, was sentenced Wednesday to serve one to three years in prison for concealing his communist links when he ap plied for a permit to leave this coun try In 1945. He was released on $20,000 bond pending appeal. Sentence was imposed by Justice James W. Morris in V. S. district court here where Eisler was convict ed last August. Sentencing had been delayed while the court considered an application for a new trial and the government made moves toward Eisler's deporta tion to Germany. jiifiii Vv ;.;ivi"i ..v ' (Continued from Page One) election upon which the eyes ot the world are presently fixed, 31 partus will have tickets. In such a mess, it is fairly obvi ous Uiat tile communist combina tion of parties. If it gets aa miuil as 40 per cent of the total vote, will be able to lone some ot us men into the government. DEMEMBKR this also: If the communists are able to force themselves into tile new Itul-' lan government, they will rcuiii tirst for the ministry that CONTROLS THE POLICE. They will then pro. ceed to set up a secret police system. In all these "Isms" twhich basi cally are rackets designed to enable a few meu at the top to get the bulk of the gravyi the secret police system Is the mainspring that runs the clock. PACED by this prospect, we add more candy to the sack we're promising the Italians If they vote I trlcity and tune-up- right. We announce in Washington i uoskl of Kluiniiili r'alli . m.... uiu. u, ami. ms; B,, Hawkins ot Sulem. ina- wili pay four and a half million dol- cll,e shop and Kuiisiiilthing; John lars for work Italian war prisoners otfel nf Kl,.,rh k,.ii mm did in wartime in America. I , Uo.uiw,iricmu' n,,v iir.- .! We don't say WHEN we'll pay Klamath Fall, uel.lm- William OVS Housing Plan Okayed By Board A major portion of the Hale board of education's all-day meeting In Salrm Wednesday was devoted to approval) of several policies and pro. Jeeta at Oregon Vocational cliool. OVS Director Winston D. I'urvlne revealed today thai the slate hoard okayed plans to obtain the Moun tain view homing unit from Ilia pumip Housing uilniiiiutralion to house OVS students. An Intercollegiate shirts program was okayed for OVS and will appear in detail on tomorrow s sports page ol I lie Herald and News. Among instructors approved by the board are Lawrence French of Klamath Kails, welding: Wallace Uerlings ot Klamalh Falls, body and fender; Alice Stone of Portland, cooking; Karl Ualrey ot Portland, silk screening process; John Howard ot Portland, business management; John Human of Astoria, auto eleo Leonard Ulo- auio pauil- over Uie dough. We leave that to tile Italian voter's Imagination. HE present Italian government tills morning for all the votes It can I get. It announces that Italians 1 abroad will be given free passage home if they get there by a "certain specified time." The barb In that hook is the prac Air Force To Up Personnel WASHINGTON. March 35 iP The air force announced Wednesday it will seek 35.000 more enlisted men. This is a reversal of a policy Just a week old. On MRrch 16. the service said It had 313.000 enlisted men and would not accept any more enlist ments except as replacements for those leaving the service. Today's announcement said the aim now Is to raise the number to 337.000. In order to do that, it lifted a ban against recruiting married men. Its officers strength is just under 48.000. the size allowed by air force appropriations. Newton of Klamath Falls, piano tuning and repair: and Kerinit Jones of Oregon City, refrigeration servicing. I The board has approved plana to award a certificate to graduates of , the school, signed by the governor, state superintendent uf publie in , struclion. state director of vocational ! education and the school director. A stale advisory committee report, AFTER April 18 they 11 have trouble collecting. tical certainty that if they get there formed from the group s meeting at OVS earlier this mouth, was okayed In full by the board and Uniuded formation nf ltvat ndvlsorv commit- JN Washington. President Truman j tw3 to be , up fur fad, culs, d " h' iiucin. 'u io include two employes aim two United Suites is calling olf its par- employers. tition ot Palestine policy because It j Purvine said that the board okayed has become apparent that partition i continuation of the present non- SAIGON can not be enforced WITHOUT AMERICAN TROOPS. That is to say: We started something In Palestine on the spur of the moment. Later, we discovered that what we had started couldn't be finished without fighting. So we are saying. In et- 1 feet: "We'll talk, but we won't fight." In such a case, what would YOU think IP YOU WERE RUNNING RUSSIA? H MONO other things, we need a foreign policy that Isn't Just Im- ! provised to meet the needs of the ! Immediate moment (including. suiiiciimro. uic iiccu io eirci some body or other here at home. profit operation of the campus store which is operated by the school. RAINBOW THEATRE Kvt. SttswB f:4S-S:SS V. m. Dennis O'Ke.fe In Vlr. District Attorney" And ! Writtru Fraiar . rone or the sadpi.E' DIES PORTLAND. March 25 IPi Bar bara Sue Oakes, 1-year-old daugh ter of Mrs. Virginia Oakes. died In her crib yesterday, apparently from suffocation. , If the Insefct called' "Bulking stick" loses a leg, another will grow in its place. Moose Slate Initiation A large class of candidates will be Initiated into the Moose lodge tonight. This will be the second class initiated in the Mooseheart founda tion campaign in honor of its found er, the late James J. Davis. Guest speaker will be ' Charles Poole of the Eugene lodge and Gov ernor Art Purser of the Eugene lodge will be here to present tro phies won by the local lodite at the state Moose bowling tournament held recently. The program will get tinder way with a feed at 8:30, followed by initiation at 8 p. m. All members are urged to attend. The World Today By DMVITT MACKENZIE AF Foreign Affairs Analyst DsWilt Mackanilt Little Ads get Big Results. Use The Herald and New s Want-Ads I Tills Is the second anniversary of Hl first meeting ot I lie United Na tions security council In America, as you were reminded in this col umn yesterday by my colleague, Francis W. Carpenter, member of tl'e AP staff at the headquarters of the peace organization. It la not a day of unalloyed re joicing and optimism, to speak euphemistically, for things have gone badly dur ing these two years. Still, Carpenter tells us that while the UN Is pass ing through perhaps Ita blackest days, no responsible leader or dele gate shows any signs of throw ing up h 1 1 hands and quit -tlmr. That Is as should be. for HUn.iot i... i.- j ... niini nnmun uie corner and we snail nave war the day that work. crs ror peace give up In despair. Yet, occause me atralrs of the UN un happily are so much at sixes and sevens, many observers are won dering whether the time hasn't ar rived to put some fresh line of en deavor into operation to bolster the orranlratlon or, let us say. com plement It. The old League of Nations failed In the main because it didn't do Its duty. Some members continued to play power politics, and there were others like Japan and Italy which had aggression in their hearts and dr-llberately made war for conquest. Jnpan'a Invasion of Manchuria in ml established the nrererient which Insnlred Mussolini and Hit-le- to follow suit, but the league temporlned with the Jananese ease and finally dismissed the matter hv truing the Nipponese thev were had Kids. Our new UN also has aggression- minded nations among Us member hlp and has become a house divid ed against Itself, we have the Rus. Ian cnmmunl'tlc bloc on the one slrte and the demrx-rntlr bloc nn Hie other and the differences have be. rr.ine so great that the work of the oraanlntlon has been largelv brought to a s'andstlll despite the frri that the malorltv Ilea with the democracies The stalemate has been achieved bv Russia's employ ment of the veto nower In the se curity council which alone can take action to prevent or punish aggres sion. Because of this Impossible situa tion there Is increasing demand irnm many quarters for a revision of the UN charter or. short of lha'. for the creation of a new nrganln ticn comnrlslmr the entire drmo cutlc bloc. This bloc would, of course. Inrlude the newiy-formed Western European union. -Revision of the charter Is called for In a resolution Introduced bv Id members of the U. 8 house of rep resentatives eight democrats and eipht republicans. This resolution proposes to ellmlnste the use of the veto on Issues if aggression, arma ment for aggression and admission o membership In the UN. Russia would be Invited to participate In th revised organization. There are those who are afraid of such a step on the grounds that It would widen the breach between the two worlds. Well, that need no longer be a cause for hesitation, be- cr-lue the division already is com nlrle. We have a communist world and a democratic world, and noth ing is going to alter that. What ran do. however. Is to strengthen the democratic bloc so that It will b able to withstand communist ag- giesslon for that's where the ag giesslon lies. j Everything else having been tried. this Is the moment for a consolida tion of 'he democracies. That would strengthen the hand of peace. Basin Gets Clear Weather Spring was buttling It nut Willi winter In Die Klamalh basin this week and on several occasions was forced nut of t lip plclurn as Did Man Winter raged in flue slyle. After several hours nf snow yes tirday morning, Die sun broke tliiniigh the clouds at noon, but bv 4 o'clock a driving atonn whipped this section and added another Inch of snow to a fairly heavy pack which remains on hillsides above the city. Precipitation-- actual water ronlent was Oil Inches, Bo ot rdlng to the weatherman. The leniiieinlure slid to 33 de greea at nn enrly hour this morn ing and there was a crust of Ice oi. the snow' and on open muda and puddles. Forecast for the next 34 hours la "partly cloudv." but this could mean anvlhlng. That's what the weatherman said Tuesday when the Klamalh country received lis biggest snow of the spring. On the oilier hand, the sinle high way commission warned today that blluards might be expec ted In I hi' Ci.srade mountains lonluht and played havoc with Easier vacation 1st. who had planned to take off from the basin to warmer climes. The forecast Is for winds nf more than 3fl miles per hour and for sis to 13 Inches ot snow. Poe Valley ; Rancher Dies Kdwurri Allies Itoberts, 3D-yrar old rancher and meniliei uf a prm.iM uenl I'ori valley family, died and' deiily at Die family home late Tues. day ufteruooii. Itoberla, sou of Mr) ami Mrs. Eddie Huberts, had beer) lumping In the snow earlier In UK day with younger inrnibera of lilt family nud had been In uppnretil good health, t.nte In Iho uiiernooii ho and his brother IJouuld writ) carrying a saw Into the tool shed, when "Edillo" suddenly dropped la the ground. Young Huberts was born In Pos valley nud lived there Ills entire life, time. He Is survived hv his parent nud two brothers. Donald mid War ren Klr.le Kolinis. all of Poe valley Final rites will be held Friday al 1:30 p. m. from the chapel of III Karl Whltliak Funeral home wiih Interment In the famllv plot In llrct fliid cemetery. I'oe valley. II puys to Use Ihe Wnul-Ailsl Prison Break Bluff Fails PORTLAND. March 35 (,n A prisoner who tried to break Jnll with a paper dart and a warhead ot dynamite caps was still behind bars today. He also had a blink eye and was In solitary confinement. Jailer Walter Chalfield at Mult nomah county's iliak Butts jail said Harry M. Hniiilron. awaiting trial on three larceny charges, made a disturbance last night and Chat field decided to move him Io soli tary. He telephoned to the Jail of fice for keys to be sent up. When Ernest Weygnndt arrived with them. Handrnn pulled the dart and war head from his pocket and ordered. "Oiien tile corridor and let the rest of them out or I'll throw tins" Nearly 100 prisoners. Including men charged with the Sweet Home bank robberies and Olds A King store holdup are In cell blocks which would have been opened had Wey gnndt complied. Instead, Chatfleld said, he slam med the outer vestibule door shut and Weygundl rushed for Handron. Chief Jailer Jack Mathews heard the noise and Joined In subduing the prisoner. Basin Youths Win At Show Incomplete judging returns from the Grand National Junior Live stock Exposition at Sun Francisco list three Klamath county 4-11 club boys and girls among the winners. Vernon C. Holey of Ilonanta was listed among the winners in the 4-H class of Hereford steers from 955 to 1100 pounds. In the Aberdeen Angus class for steers from 9s5 to 1100 pounds. Kathleen Wilson of Ma lm was Indicated as a winner, and Elliott West, also of Mnlln wns list ed among winners In the Aberdeen Angus class for heifers or steers from BOS to 950 pounds. The steers were sold Wednesday at the auction sale and the club members and their families will re turn to Klamath Falls Friday. STEVE WALKER Distributor Signal Heating Oils Downtown office now at 140 East Main St. War Widow Still Has Her Home BEDFORD, Ind., March 35 iP) A modest little home north of here is still owned by a World War II widow and her five children even though it was auctioned off at tax delinquent sale Monday. When the home came up In the sales, County Auditor Donald Smith explained the circumstances. The auctioneer called for bids and the crowd was silent. , "I'll bid 115," a woman's voice fin ally sold. Again the crowd was silent. The auctioneer shouted "Sold." and gave a receipt to the woman who had made the bid Mrs. Dona Blevlns, the war widow who lives l.i the place. Women Of The Moose To Sponsor Dance Members of Ihe Moose lodge an.1 Mends are invited to an Easter dance sponsored by the Women of the Moose this Saturday from 10 m. to 1 a. m , In the lodge hull. Proceeds from the affair will go tonard sending the Women of the Moose ritualistic team to the com- im slate convention In Astoria. Wllkerson's orchestra will furnish music. Holy Communion Service Slated Holy Thursday Communion aerv- Ice will be held at the First Pres byterian church tonight at 7:30 with the rites of baptism, confirma tion, and the public welcome of new members. The topic of the Table Talk Is "Not Benefactors But Ser vant." Music for the occasion will be provided by the choir under the direction of Andrew Loncy Jr., and ny Mrs. George Mclntyre, organist. The anthem chosen Is "Surely Ho nam Borne our Griefs," by An tonio Lottl, and the organ prelude Is taken from the Chorale, "Our Redeemer and Our Lord" by Alcx- naer tsnnner. Vl Call wy Me y Mac" Remember! LUGGAGE is our DUimtii not a SIDELINE Just Received! Fine MATCHED SETS For men and wmnrn In mwltlde, udillr, lop grit lit row tilde . Alto ih popuUr airplane type. ThrM arc told by 111 piece or art. ChHMC Jut what you want . . . you ran be autirrd Uial wi can alwaya match It New! 1948 Styled Leather HAND BAGS In all th drlrcd colon and Icathrn. Hv all tltr well known manufacturer. It will pay you to vlklt our ilmp. vf. no itr:r.iniNn, ok coi'itsr. The LUGGAGE SHOP 1015 Main Street Phono 9313 Klamath Foils, Ore. "See Mac and You'll Bo Back" SAVE MONEY ON YOUR FOOD BILLS with easy... safe ... wonderful to use COOKERS Hies "8et -Kitchen- Helpers" pay for them selves W to 20 timet ever In q single year... It's National PRESTO WEEK! ENDS MAR. 29 BUY NOW! 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