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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1949)
mm TC J i I 4 1 m pun rivis CKNTH esiate allio- Day's News H FRANK JKNKlNai NTEIlhaTINO next ifur Uioat who livt tliounhilul attention to euch thlnsai come this morning Iiom up el oiympia. Washington's Oovernor lanallf orders a ten per cent cut In rx- rpendtturea lor every department un der hu control. Hi Ukn Una fairly drastic action llT Irarnlng that III April, Mar and June o( Uiu yrar the lata ol Washington eiient 14 mil linii dollars mora Umil It look In. II thai keeps up. It aald In an nouncing hla rut-coats ordrr. the etair'a general fund will b broke b) January 1, rlllf alluallon appeal to ba rvtn worse than that. Actual liiium Ini revenues, the governor eaya, arc tailing lar short ol Irwialatlve eaii main. Ha thinks the aula u reelly operating on a tiO.uoo.ooO deficit. iPraaumably for Utf bieiuuum.) 1118 statement calla for a little x planauon. In murine out their budgete. g'atr tand rillaa and ouuntiee and NATIONS) follow a eyelem that dlf far eharply from lit practical of private biutnesa Inallluuona, Pn tate business panpla flral aalimat at reallallrally aa they can now much money thry will ba abla to take In. and ArTEH TI1AT thay deride how much money lhay can (ford to apand. a Tliat la to aay, privata buatnaaa people cut thalr carmrni eocordtng to Uia amount of cioth they think thry will ba abla la obtain. Public bodiaa, having the power to taa. do It exactly oppoeiie. Tney first tot up the amount thry are going to apand and then thry LEVY A TAX TO HAIttE THAT AMOUNT . OP MONEY. I Oovernment, you are, having the power to Lax tahlcst aaeena Uia pnwar to reach Into Uia pvckcl of all the) paopia and take whatever la neadrdi flral cut the pattern for the garment and then go out and levy oo the panpla for the cloth Utat will oa required. JN the old daya, when practically 1 all governmental bodies EXCEPT the frderal government relied chief ly on the grneral property tax. that worked out without much guess work. The taxing authorities simply levied ft tax rata of ao much upon the aaaraaed value of tangible pro rrty and the property owner then punxled up OK KLrlE. With the advent of the Income tax. the situation changed. The In come tax, aa Its name Implies, la a tax on the Incomes of the peop. Its quite a Job to estimate THIS YEAH what the Incomea of all the people will be NEXT YEAR. If this year la a boom year, with money flowing like water, Incomes will tend to be high. If next yrar turns out to be a "receaaion" year. Incomea will be down. Thia la the point: If INCOMES AKK DOWN, tax re ceipts will be down. That la what seems In hsve hap pened In Uia state of Washington. Anticipated Income hasn't lived up to the anticipations. Hruce the go million dollar DEFICIT Oovernor Langlle speaks about. VOU and I know all about that. All our Uvea we've been saying to ouraelrea: "I need CADILLAC. I'm entitled to II. NEXT YEAR I m going to have me one." When next yrar com -a, and we have to cut our garment according lo Uia cloth available to ua, we ahrug our ihouldrra and either drive the old car or buy one leu coaUy than we had rosily anticipated. We know that If we go too deeply In debt we U be sunk. When governments plan their next year's budgets on ft Cadlllao basis, they go through with It on that beats. If their eatlmates of Income turn out to bo too high, they bor row the difference. (That Is, they (Continued on Page 3 Property Owners Jam Council Rooms To Urge City Dads To End Rent Control Klamath Falls property owners Won the flrat round In the rent de control battle laat night when they Jammed the eounrll chambers and rgrd the rlly dada to aurt proce dure. Immediately foe a maae meet. Ing af landlorda and tenants to dll euaa the matter. Under the law, 10 days notice must be given before the meeting la held. City Attorney Perkins waa atithnrlred to take Immediate steps In arranging the rent confab. E. M. Chllrote, realtor, was the prime champion for lifting of rent celllngi. He opened hb) arbumenta by expressing the dcalre "to get out from under eight yeara of dictator ahlp" Imposed by the prolonged fix ing of rents, ' "Krrry segment af aur economy Reopens Arms Aid bearing 'aM nif a i""" ' rv, If . . I r :,;. - if Margaret MltrhrU Authoress Dies After Car Accident ATLANTA. Aag. II lPl Mar garet Mllrhrll. the aether ef t-ane With the ioe- died today. Nhe waa atnark dawa by ft apeedntg aartaeaeMIe aa reach tree etreel last Tbwradae Wight. Mlea MltrhrU died at 1I:J ft. as. (EHTl 1st Henry (irady Meaaeetal baaplUL Darters aald aha had ft trartarrd akalU fraetarea af the pelvla. and alher Injartea. The qwlet author af the faawaua etvtl war aavet, waa hit by a ear aa aha and bee hanband. John R. Ma rah, an advertising eseentlve eraaard the atraet while walking to ft ewevle rar her baaae. retire ehargrd the drtree of the ear. Hash D. (ravltl. Is, with aoa pleaaaj af aaaaalaaahler. Ciravllt, Uil driver, waa all duly at the Maae and la hla private ear. Pallre rerarda ahaw ha haa bad t t raffle rteiaUaeai aeevlewaly against hlas. The apeeding ear alamawrd her ta the pavfUftt and dragged her It feet. Marsh, a areal-lnvalld aa the re call af a heart attack, held his wife la hla arena wnttl police and an am bulance arrived. Mhe waa carried la the City haapllai, and aperlallau were called. Million Job Increase Seen By Year's End WASHINGTON. Aug. U (V-8ec-retary of Labor Tobin forecast to day an Increase of a million Jobs by the end of the year and a correa ponding drop III unemployment. Tobin reported to President Tru man that the employment sltuaUon li Improving steadily. He told reporters on leaving the White House: "It looks very much like there will be a decided Increase In employment during the next six montlu and that by the end of the year payrolls will be Increased by approximately 1.000, 000 persona. This does not take In the possi bility of major strike In coal or steel, he said. Tobin aald there would be ft sub stantial Increase In employment and a drop In unemployment figures be ginning about the middle of Sep tember. WRECK PORTLAND, Aug. IS Vft A trac tion comiwny bus and a two-ton truck collided on S. W. Broadway at Main street today and the truck overturned but no one was Injured. Patrolman T. R. Crecraft said the bus failed to yield right-of-way. waa oat from under price control two year ago, except houalng awn are," t'hllrote argued. He aald he does not eiperl rente In general to show pronounced Jump. "There will be some booala In rent," he added, "but anly where It la necessary." Mayor Robert A. Thompson stated that the council had not taken any action because It didn't realm there waa "this much Interest," referring n the crowd gathered. Mayor Thompaon brought out Uiat controls on rent could be lifted In two ways. One would ba Ui method chosen last night, that of calling ft mass meeting, deciding In favor of de-control, then handing It In tha city council for Ita approval, lo tha governor for hla final okay, KLAMATH FALLH, OKKGON. Tl'fHDA House Quits, Federal Fund Log-Jam Left WASHINtiTOV. Am. If fT Th bout adjoitrnrd today without rt Ifif on an appropriation lojr Jam UHnv up ftnanc af Ch military aaUbllthmrnl and athrr frdrral acnrlra, A a mult, the agrnclrs affected will bt? prnnllru, al IraAt another day. Their authority to Incur obll latioiu or apend moiwy ended laat miditUtht. beaidet the drfrnae enUb luhmeut the aitenclra witliout fundi are the Intertur department, vet erana admlnlAtratloti. and the eco nomic cooperation admlnutratlon. Tha rulea rommlru called an aflernKMi aftaalon to art an a reaolu Umn whkh would proTtdr rmerc eney financing until refular appro prlatlon bllli ara paaaed. Aetloai HUlIrd But even If the rules committee approvaa, the rvaolutlon cannot be acted on until tomorrow. Ii tlll would have to be pajieed by the enate before the af enact could be relieved financially. Technically, aaid Chairman Can non (D-Mo of the houae approprl ailona committee, they can't spend or commit a aintle penny let ally, and aome govemment people 'are getting frantic about It-'' llawever, tha drfrnae department hawed tw nreaalng anilety. Aa fflrtal aaid It baa aalhority mder baric law ta ewnllnae eMtraetlng far faad. fael. etc.; Ita eWtlian pay roll nai maUy rwna 1Z daya behind aeevtc ea eendered. Something may be done about the situation before the end of the day. It reaulu from the fact that con grew, haa not yet finally paaaed the annual appropriation bills for the agenctea lnr red. and a temporary financing Bieaaure for them expired last midnight. The bowse apsvroprlatians ewoi slttee aowght bowse apprwraj yea terday of anofher temporary aneaa wre. bat the rwsb aveeedare rea aired a I thirds vote and II didn't get H, although It mastered a asaotity. Cannon haa a feed the rulea com mittee to grant clearance for the emergency measure under procedure requiring only a majority rote. The rules committee turned him down late yesterday bu. was expected to change Its mind later. Steel Boss Says No To Pay Boost NEW YORK. Aug. 1 Presi dent Arthur B. Homer, president of the Bethlehem Steel Corp.. told prealdentlal fact-finding board to day his company "cannot and will not be a party" to ft fourth round of wage Increases. "This ta no time for further con cessions," Homer declared. "The facta do not Justify any more wage Increases, and. In the national In terest, the ruinous Inflationary spiral of wages and prices must come to an end." The head of the nation' second largest steel concern was the open ing witness as the Industry organ Ita fourth day of testimony before the three-man board. Carpentry Tools Stolen From Mill An auortment of carpentry tools were atolen from tool houae at the Elllngson planing mill construc tion Job sometime over the week end. Deputy Sheriff Marlon Barnes aald today. Tha tools Included kit of wood bits, saw, hammer, wrecking bar. expansion bit and hand drill and wei valued at IAS by the owner. J. 8. 8ehorn. Deputy Barnes aald two men ap parently were Involved In the theft and they carried the tools away in a car. I and Uten lo the housing expeditor In Washington. The other, and ane which Mayor Thompson seemed to favor, would call foe the area rent administrator referring the matter directly to the rent expeditor In Waahlngton, whe would handle the problem directly from hla office. However, the audience waa not In favor of pursuing the latter courae, but urged the city "to stand on Ita own feet," rather than wall for govemment action. Nick Long opined that rent con trol was necessary once but now It la " political football." It was not specified where the maaa meeting of landlorda and ten ante will be held. p0" -alT l, l4f Barrymore Loses Tongue Over Sister HOLLYWOOD, Aug. It iPi The president af the lolled autre, tbr only living former president, and a farmer prima aalnletrr af f.Blland think Hhrl Barrymere la pretty wonderful but hee brother Lionel la aet las pressed. Miss Barryawee. dletaff raler ef America a reyal family af the theater, waa 7g veara old yester day. In honor af the aeeaaiaa. a nationwide broadcast laat alghl rarrled tributes from President Traman, Herbert lleever. Mrs, Meaner Rooarrelt. Winston I'burrhlll and eearee of other great personalities. But at a luncheon yealrrday Lionel Barrymore eeuld think ef nothing more to say than: "Well, KlheL I'm awfally happy yea are with ae and I wish yea many happy returns." Hindis Head Lauis B. Maver, wha gave the luncheon for Mine Barrymore, aald: "Cieaa, that's a herk af a apeern. Yea eaa aay asare than that" "I'm aarry replied Lionel, "bat my writer has gone ta San Fraactara." Punchboard Battle Rages In Portland PORTLAND. Aug. 1 Ft Port lands punchboard battle may go either to the courts or to the people. Opponents of Mayor Dorothy Mc- Cullough Lee's edict that boards yield prises for aklll and not on chance aatd today they were laylaj piana. City llceua stamp pre viously affixed ta punch boards ex pired last mid mint except about 10 which had been placed on legal boards. Moat punchboarda fall to meet tha city s legality test. A group know as Oregon Sales 8umulalori company sponsored ft meeting last night at which one proposal was made to start a recall against the mayor. S. A. Srdlock. vending machine company head and spokesman for the group, said re call was not the way to solve, the problem, "We want to ab.de by the law but we think the courts should decide whst the law Is." Srdlock said. He was critical of Mayor Lee, saying that "we were running thee same boards all the Urn ah waa com missioner and she never let out peep. Now that she Is mayor she acta Ilka king and takes a dom ineering and conquering altitude." He said the plan now la to ask for a court ruling on what Is a legal punchboard. or to draft an Initiative designed to remove punchboarda from the constitutional ban on lot teries. Vacation Travel In Oregon Gams SALEM. Aug. 11 ( Vscstlon lste and eight-seeing travelers are getting around a little mora this yrar than (sat. The atat highway commission1 travel informauon department has these figures to show: Crater Lake National park reports a 3 Der cent Inrrasia In lha nn,K of visitors for the travel year going ones to iaai uctooer 1. Last monui the Increase was 10 per cent over July, IMS, and laat June was up H.7 per cent. Oregon Caves re porta a 21 per cent Increase laat month over the same month a year ago. Bonneville dam had a 13 per cent Increase in July. Traffic on the Astorla-Megler ferry waa up 11 per cent last month over July, IMS. Leading In the number of out-of-state licenses observed In Oregon this year are California ju..Ki.,n, and Illinois. BULLETIN SMKK.LIRS COVK, Calif.,' Aug. 16 i Man went deeper Into the aea today than aver before la hiatory. and reported atrang schools af flashing flab. Marine F.xplorer (Ilia Barton rea herd 4M0 feet below the Pa elfic, then announced after eight minutes that he waa coming back up. His original gaal waa C00 feet. "It seems rather pointless lo go' any farther without lights," ha aaid. "I can't see yery much. Everything I see seems to be about tha same as I saw a little higher ap." Hla lights had gone out al 4100 fere, hut ho oanlail t al-. im.iI a I bit farther In the bitter cold. When he reached 4M0 feet he waa 1300 feet deeper than he and William Bee be. New York ost arallat, had drsnended off Ber muda In 1M. WIATHER iiuiii rails uiaiitt rair Uar aa Weeaa4av. Blah laSar at. Lw leaifht a. Mil Wa ftf. Mai. ias. Ii - rt Ipltatlea last M fcaars ... a Telephone 1111 No, 154 George Asks Action; May Demand Cut WASHINGTON. Aug. It (jHrm. stars m creed themselves la a stermy aesalaa today and ordered heartnga reopened aa the admlnlatratiaa'a SI.tM.eM.ee foreiga arm arograaa. Chairman Connelly iD-Tex.) of the combined senate foreign rela tions and arms services committee snnounced after a closed session that the groups will hear a half DKBATE WASHINGTON. Aag. I The baaae rale committee todav sent the SI,4S..M arma-aid bill te the betes floor for ane day ef debate to morrow. The commit lee approved pea era are leaving the way open for aav amendments from the floor. lis ene-dav limiutloa dee not meaa that the baaae will rote at the ead af laonorrow a at sal in, bat anly that getvorsl debate will ead dozen witnesses. They will Include Henry A. Wallace and Norman Thomas, both former minority party presidential candidates. (.anally amid tha aadltaeaal Bear ing, starting toaaarraw, will lake a boat twa daya. He aaid he eeobls Bow that the seaate grP eaa vote thia week aa the bin, which waa appraeed far the fall amount yesterday by the faresga affair easnmltte. Closed Keaaion Senators scheduled an afternoon closed aesaion to talk over with Sec retary of Defense Johnson a report from Gen. Douglas MacAnhur cov ering the strategic situation in the Japan-Korea area. Johnson announced that Mac Arthur has declined an Invitation voted 19 to II by the senate group last Friday, to return bom to test ily on the arms plsn. Administration acceptance had been fareeaat earlier for some ef a eerie af a men amenta offered by Senators Vaadeaberg IR-Mirh.1 and Dalle (B-N.Y.I ta the fereiga aram program. Connolly told reporters the move to reopen hearings was Initiated by Senator George iD-Os I, who has been urging that tha proposed $1 450 000 000 fund be cut In half. Most of the witnesses le be heard wUI be la eppoaitioa ta the aragraaa. Ceaaally aaid. The Texaa senator added that it new appear that the seaate "has sot a goad deal af time" ahead af It before It eaa consider the arms ara gnua biiaaaa af the pre af other legiaUltsB. On the other side of the capltol. Speaker Rayburn predicted at a newa conference, that the house mould approve the bill in "sub atantlally" the form voted by the foreign affairs committee. Nine Bodies Recovered At Crash Scene OALWAY. Ireland. Aug. If i.P The bodies of all nine persons who lost their lives in an air accident at sea yesterday have been recovered and Identified. The accident occurred when a Ttaiuocean Airliner with 58 persons aboard ran out of gas and bellied Into the Atlantic off Ireland. Forty nine persons were saved In ft dra matic flare-lit air-sea rescue. Meanwhile a full Investigation of the crash went forward today with American officials participating. George Clark of New York arrived at Shannon airport early today to Investigate the disaster for the civil aeronautics board. Eight of the victims were among 17 Italian Immigrants en route to Venezuela from Rome. The ninth casualty. Radioman Herbert Asbel of Brooklyn, N. Y., waa drowned when the wreckage knocked him from the fuselage Into the aea. Bridges' To Quit Lush Miners Job CONCORD. N. H.. Aug. 1 i,) U. S. Sen. Styles Bridges iR-N.H.I aald today he will resign next month hla -35.000 year trusteeship of the United Mine Workers welfare fund. He said he wants to wait until tha first yearly report on the fund It completed, sometime next month, before atepping out. It was recently disclosed that Bridges and Kara Van Horn, fund trustee of the coal operators, had been drawing a $35,000 a year al lowance, while John L. Lewis, union chief and third trustee, had not been drawing from his allowance. Bridges claims moat of tha allow ance went for expenses of hiring legal experts and accountants to help handle the 1100,000,000 fund. ! I ''s - 77 " iVirttVuy - -a. " SIGHTIN' OUT Project Engineer C. V. Eckhordf tokes o sight through o theodolite o high-precision transit while faking shots on triangulation points. Eckhardt is in charge of a survey being conducted by the U. S. geological survey, which is charting more than 1800 square miles of Modoc and Siskiyou county land in California. The survey is finding con trol points which are used in laying out aerial maps of the areo. The protect is slated to moves in. Survey CrewsWorking On Big Project Of Mapping ! Modoc, Siskiyou Area By MALCOLM EPLET JR. ' the Geological Kerrey la 1XM and Survey crewa from the regional lgSS. bat that first map waa aothing office of the U. 8. Geological barrey asare than a reconnaissance ataa ta la Sacra mm to are working In the coanpartaon ta today s ma pa. and at Klamath basin Jast south af the Stat line, compiling a topographle surrey af eight aaaadrangte corns -aweed af tzi square mile each af Medee and Slakiyea county land. The crews are"makin their field headquarters In Klamath Palls while they work on the Job. which Is known a the Doma-Straw pro ject. The land-scannintT la due to go on through the summer and until winter weather causes a let-up In activities, c. V. Eckhardt la project engineer. t This snrrey Is' a preliminary phase thst la aecesssry la mapping the area from aerial photographs. The map thus asade will not only be aecarate In scale and paaitlonlng. bat alsa la topography. The contour Interval of the map Is 40 feet, and the scale of the field map Is one inch to 4000 feet. The published scale, however will be one inch to one mile. This region waa flrat mapped by Ike's Name Hinted For Prexy Post CONCORD. N. H.. Aug. If iPI U. 8. 8en. Styles Bridges iR-N. H.I believes General Dwtght D. Eisen hower may be "changing his mind" aiaj might accept the republican nomination for the presidency In 1952. Eisenhower, now president of Co lumbia university, refused to be ft GOP candidate in 14S after "draft" movement gained consid erable headway. A similar move ment among some democrats failed to budce the World War II hero from his position of not seeking the presidency. Bridges told a group of editors here last evening he thought Eisen hower would have made " very strong showing" If he waa a candi date In the last national election. Asked if he believed "Ike" might change his mind relative to accept ing a 1962 nomination. Bridges said yes. He was then asked, "and on your aide?" Again the answer was In the affirmative. Queried concerning the political plans of Oov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, Bridges aald: "Dewey La through. He may not recognize It but people of the coun try do." Social Security Expansion Ok'd WASHINGTON, Aug. 16 lPr-A vast expansion of the nation s social security program. In line with Presi dent Truman's recommendations, was approved formally by the house ways and means committee today. Tha vote was a topheavy 22 to 3. Supporting the legislation were 15 democrat and seven republicans. Opposing were three republicans. House leaders Indicated they will seek action on the bill before con gress adjourns. But the senate probably will not art until 1950. be cause of tha legislative logjam there. , carry on until winter weather I aresent it Is eat ef print Of serial photography waa an heard at I Bridges and hut union blocked for at that these, and cMti-asted with I on full day. at least, the govern the aresent asetheds, the aid are- ment's operation on Mataon Una cedar aeeas erode and Inaccurate, j ships. They normally carry the bulk In the 100 years of Its existence. f Hawaii-mainland commerce. tho loMrtnont of Inlarinr nf which l Harbor Board Maaaarer Ben P. the Geological Survey la part, has kept well abreast of modern pro gress In the field of mapping. .IMS marks the one hundredth anniver sary of the department. , ' A slogan for the anniversary has been devised: "1849 A Centui of Conservation lfttg." The atility af the aups. which are compiled by saaltiplex opera tors the reaioaal office la i Maine" the surrey data la coo trolling the iav3t and placing af the aerial photos, te anexcelled La that all every field af business eaa .nd aai ase for them. Along Industrial lines, new fac tories, power plants, construction projects, railroads and Irrigation projects demand topographic maps for convenience and efficiency in planning and layout. The maps are extremely advan tageous In highway construction, not only in showing routes, but also the nearest sources of construction ma terials. Drainage and trrigalien Bscs in thia area would be anending, aa the ' mspa would help La the planning f eanala and ditches to convey water from treama and reaerratra. Geologists often us the maps in the study, classification and record ing of geological facts, and city and park planners use them not only In ! the layouts of streets and sones. but i also In sewage disposal and water protection. j An almost end lea list af aaes j la the administrative field for the maps Include railroad examination for economic purpose, and the lay- Ing of logging railroad routes and ' roads. Locations for lines af com- munications. lookout point, and ; many other set-up can be readily i figured en the concise ansa. ! The maf t cn be obtained by the nnhlii fne a nnminal feo he avrltine to the director. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington. 35, D. C. Portland Tax Hearing Has Little Effect On KF Case There la only an outside chance that Portland's court teat case of that city's occupational tax ord inance will affect Klamath Falls' ordinance. It was learned today from City Attorney Henry Perkins, who sat in on the hearing In Port land Monday, One of the charge being aimed at Portland ordinance In auit against the city Is that the tax being levied against occupations la In ex cess of the 6 per cent constitutional limitation, Perkins said. If the court hearing, which Is ex pected to last through Tuesday, results In upholding of this charge. It would affect only Portland's ord inance. However, If the case goes to the state supreme court, and that law making body upholds the circuit court decision, then every ordinance In the state calling for money over the per crnt limitation would auto Territory Slows Up On Injunction HONOLl'Lr, Aag. 1 (-HaiTT Bridge shoved Hawaii's lOi-dsy CIO dork strike Into a deeistva phase today. The territorial govern ment obtained an antl-plrketlng ba Junetioa. He defied K personally. The next step waa up to Walter D. Ackerman Jr., Hawaii's attorney general. His office ssld Bridges, president of the CIO International Longshoremen'a and Warehouse men s union, might be arrested for contempt. Ackerman aaid he would determine today what to do. Ackerman went lata etreall eaart yeaterday to ebtain tha Injunction. He acted ander aa emergraey taw el the territorial IrgnJalare. lader thia aet the government haa seised Hawaii's struck stevedoring firms. It plana ta operate the dorks, tied ap since the ILWU strark May 1 fee a IZ emu hike la the S1.M hearty Basle longshore wsge. Picket Line The territory resorted to the In junction aa It tried to unload the Mataon Line freighter Hawaiian Merchant at pier nine. ILWU pick ets were on duty there. CIO ma nne cooks and stewards and Inde pendent marine firemen said they would walk off the ship If govern ment stevedores worked behind tha picket line. Judge Edward A. Tows granted the tnjnacilaa. It restrains tha ILWU from picketing pier Bine. It aba restrains the ILWU, Its offi cers and la -John Does" frees "la. citing or directing anyone else ta packet the pier and thus halt week a the ship. Taking picket post on pier nine. Bridges moved swiftly toward tha' ILWU a long-threatened test of tha -seizure law's constitutionality. Authorities served him with aa injunction notice. He stuffed it In his pocket. For half-hour ha marched on the picket Una. Police did not try to stop him. On the march he told reporters: Up la Caart "This la the start aa thia law. 11a going to tha sBpreasa eassrt, Thia ta when It starts and that as whore H win end. What thee islands sweat ta a cool breese, legiaLstlvely apeak I lug." The ILWU has called the seizure ! law all along an attempt to break I the strike. ash ataaed a statement aaying tha territory a plana had been dc laved. Thai was dae. he said, ta objec tions af the ship's crew ta working behind the ILW U picket line and ta "ansae delay la enforcement" ef the hi June lion. HVest Coast Plane Slates Klamath Trip A DC-3 airliner of the West Coast Airlines will fly Into Klamath Palls next Thursday morning at 10:30, and members of the Klamath County chamber of commerce avia tion committee will be given a trip over Crater lake. After the flight, a meeting will be held with the West Coast officials to discuss possible air service by thst line through this area. West Coast serve Medford and northward at the present time, and there Is possibility that the serv ice may be extended to Klamath Falls If proposals by the civil aero nautics board for feeder line sub stitution for mainline service are carried through. 8outhwest Airways has also been -suggested aa the air-carrier from Klamath Falls. It serves from Medford through to San Francisco. FIRE CONTROLLED McCALL. Idaho, Aug. IS iPv The 5000-acre fire In the Salmon river section of the Payette national for est was reported under control to day. Tha rp. of lonn m-n m-hth K- I tied the Salmon river blaze for mora than week has been cut In half. matically be ruled unconstitutional, Perkins stated. "The Portland circuit court will probably wait for two or three weeks to hand down a decision, Perkins said. He added that he thinks the cir cuit court In Portland will rule la favor of the city. The Portland hearing Is ft test case brought by two Individual but backed by several organizations. The Portland suit Involves 33 dif ferent ordinances whereas Klamath Falls has only one blanket ordinance taxing occupations. The 9 per cent limitation clause ruling la the only point that would directly affect this city's ordinance and even then It would have to come through state supreme court, Perkins emphasised. Individuals from several Oregon cities sat In on the hearing. Tha Eugene city attorney waa the only municipal representative besides Perklna.