Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, September 22, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, l!4
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PACE FOUR
rmAMt jinsuxi
gdller
111. JKNK1NI
alaeaefiS KOlluC
Lumber. (BUI It buck hunting.) . . . Webb Staunton,
on el the original Tutelage homesteaders, hu font
Plret Class Till th Boat Sinks. Our epeclal Tult
operative report that Webb It buck hunting with a
fancy, colored chef, whit cap and all! I
M seanail eiaee asatw a mm pom sense of aDametk,
FlijiOri-. Autuat . Ooosraaa,
alsra t 17.
HtHHIU Of TBI atlOClATID ruii
ail U- local Daw. orlolod la UUa -eater,
aa wall aa au A bows,
Tte Jr. Livestock Show
By DEB ADDISON
POOR old Chet Malnl After rvlii for a year
at president of the Tulelak Rotary club. he
should tot retired to pasture for a year. Inttead
thoae hearUeee fellow club mem
ber of hit put him In charge of
their blf project, the tint annual
Tuleltke Roury Junior Livestock
Show.
Could It be that this heartleat
treatment comet from having a
banker at prealdent thu yearr
(Hope the Klamath Fallt Rotar
lant don get any tuch Ideas.)
It could be, of court, that
Chet aaked for It Anyway. Hi
a (rand program, and heret con
(ratulatlont to the Tulelaken for
taking on a real project for the
kids.
Neither the Klamath nor Tule-
dolng the real work. Tcry Just
These Days
3l
ADDISON
lata UiYm are
furnish the trimmings and put on a show and sale
to climax about a year 'a work on we pan 01 uie
4-H and FFA club members. It't part of the regu
lar 4-H and FFA programs. The kids do the work.
Judging will be Saturday afternoon, and the
auction will start at o'clock. From remarks picked
wp around town there should be teveral Klamath
people bidding for the fat beef, sheep and hogs.
Locals will be the Tulelak high school.
If you hare California friends and customers
bere t a chanc to do more than back-slapping.
ALL dumping of unwanted oatt and dogt doesn't
take place In the country. Larry Mueller, city
poundmaster. was called on Wednesday to pick up
bag of rati that had been left on torn strangers
porch.
. Here's tht dope on what to do with atray cats
or dogs, or pett you no longer can tak car of:
Take them to the Klamath Palls Animal Shelter,
or telephone 733. The shelter It located Just past
Hitch" Nltachelm't Klamath View Auto court on
highway 97 touth.
The pound It operated by the city to take care
of strays, and there's no charge for k. II you hav
to dispose of your own animal the charge la one
dollar. The poundmaster will try to find a new
horn for your pup or pussy. (But there's not much
luck oa cat. They're too numerous, he aayaj If
finding a horn It out of the question, the animal
s put to sleep with gat. painlessly.
If you're looking far a pet, you're welcome to
look over the "stock at th shelter. The charg
Impounding fee and board) will run two. dollars
or a little more, not to exceed fir.
H your mutt or kitten k AWOL, or there 't one
hanging around that obriously It AWOL, phone TIM.
The shelter acta at a clearing house for lost ani
mals and often the owner It located before the
pet mr gett to the pound.
Poundmaster Mueller hat two requests to makt
af dog owners, and everyone In general. If you
lee anyone abandoning animals, get the car license
umber and phone the Klamath FaOt Animal
Shelter. If you own bitch, dont let her run loose,
it's hard to find a home for mongrel pups.
(Plug The HAN runt a Lost and Pound want-ad
ohimnj
1 fONDER If Jim Elingt will put on at good a
VV show at livestock Judge at Tula at Joe
Johnson of OSC did at Klamath? Should be worth
looking In on . . . Leah Dent, recently of the HAN
classified department and more distantly of Lake
view, went to work for the Eugene Registar-Ouard
want-ad department. She quit after one day. Said
work her spoils you for anywhere cite. I dont
want to find out . . . Olen Hout, looking hale and
hearty, was here this week with Mrs. Hout from
their home at Atherton, Calif. Olen It the now-(tBerally-tllent
partner of Bill Meade at Home
By GEORGE E. SOKOLa&Y
THI more one ponders the findings of the three
any other appointed by the president ran
steel industry, the clearer It becomes that all that
this board did was to throw tht eaae back to
collective bargaining under the Taft-Hartley law.
For this It what the board said
"(A) The subject of pensions Is not bargains bit
at this time under the terms of the reopening clause
providing for the right of either party In 148 to
negotiate for a general and uniform change In
rate of pay and or for described social Insurance.
"(B) However, the subject of pensions It bargain
able under the law as interpreted by the national
labor relations board as to all the companies.
Pensions are not included In the written agreement
and "with respect to unwritten-terms dealing with
wages, hours and other terms and conditions of em
ployment, the obligation remains on both parties to
bargain continuously'."
Avoiding tht name of the law. to suit the politics
of the president, the board nevertheless says that
the subject It bargalruvble under the Taft-Hartley
act. Such an opinion, at tht two lawyers on the
board must know It ultra vires. The board hat no
legal status. It It not a court. It cannot establish
the applicability of any act to a set of conditions.
Only congress may determine the applicability of an
act by specifying its relationship to conditions and
circumstances only the courts and the supreme
court finally can Interpret the Intent of congress
and the validity of Its acts under our constitution.
Tht national labor relations board, the adminis
trator of the law. also has the function of applica
tion and Interpretation.
Legal Limits
ALL that this three-man fact finding board, or
any other appointed by the presldent,can
legally do. It to make recommendations which can
be accepted or rejected by the parti ea at Issue. No
recommendation can be binding; tn fact, the board
should have stated the facta and clarified the Issues
and let It go at that. And all that they did do
was to throw the entire issue back to collective
bargaining under the Taft-Hartley act, each party
enjoying such remedies and tuch redress as the act
provides. Phil Murray does not like that and there
fore threatens a strike.
I am not. In this article, discussing the recom
mendations of the three man board, nor does It
matter whether Ben Falrless and Phil Murray
come to terms, as reasonable men should. The Im
portant, the permanent fact In this situation It that
the three man board proved to be a useless Instru
ment which did not save time, or the country from
disaster, but which rather Increased the confusion
and In the end went right back to the Taft-Hartley
act. It should never have been appointed. The law
should not have been by-passed. It ought not to
happen again and the Taft-Hartley act should be
fortified to prevent our current or any president
from pursuing hit ipse dixit In Industrial relations.
The law of the land should alwayt prevail, not
the political necessities of an elective official.
Political Handling
THAT this Issue was bandied politically It obvious
bom the correspondence between Phil Murray,
head of the union, who accepted the board a
recommendations at binding, and Ben Pairlets, pres
ident of the United States steel corporation, who
sought collective bargaining. Falrleas wrote Murray:
"United States Steel appeared- before the presi
dential steel board relying upon the express assur
ance given by the president of the United State
on July 14, IMS. that the recommendations of the
board would not be binding upon either party. In
our t lean m of acceptance of the president's pro
posal we referred to this assurance by him, stating
that we understood It to mean that there would
be no moral or legal obligation upon us to accept
any recommendation which the board might make. . ."
It It dangerous in a country such at ours to
Ignore the law, for the president or any other
official to function by whim or to play politics with
th nations economy. Nor should the president ap
point boards which are to make recommendations
which th president himself says need not be ac
cepted. It seems tuch a wast of time.
Who Should Provide For Your Old Age
You, Your Government Or Your Employer?
By SAM DAWSON
HTW YORK. Sept. 22 OP) Th
battle for security It shifting. Who
ahould provide for your old age
you. your government or your boss?
Some unions ssy It It up to your
boss, if your social security check
Isn't enough. 8 o m companies
reply: "No one unwilling to contri
bute to his own old age require
mentt hat a moral right to demand
that others make that provision for
htm."
Thar are already torn 12.000
Mcurlty plans In effect in private
Industry, benefitting about 4 mil
lion employes. In the battle to ex
pand this th Issue It becoming:
Who It going to pay for the tup
port of our trowing army of th
aged
Steel companies, under particular
attack on the subject Just now, say
many of them har had pension
and welfare insurance plans in
effect over a period of years. All,
they say. are willing to discuss the
matter with labor, but only if the
employe also contribute to the
pension fund. Such a fund, they add.
Is sounder, more equitable, and
more easily held In check.
When labor concentrated Its fight
on getting higher wages, one of
Its argumants was that a man
should make enough to be able to
put a little aside for hit old age.
This fall labor it insisting that it
is the boss who would put a little
aside for the employe. Union labor
reasons that as wage went up, so
did prices, to that the worker still
didn't have much put aside for old
age.
Th worsen trgue that corpora
tions tak car of pension for the
top brass and for free in most
Instances. Why not tht working
man?
This Issue who pays for pen
sions threatens crippling strikes
In the steel, automobile, electrical
appliance, coal and other indus
tries. The appeal for pensions used to
be an appeal to sentiment the
most common figure of speech was
"putting the old horse out to pas
ture." Of course, the old horse
might have preferred staying in a
warm barn eating oats, but the most
amiable corporations put their old
horses out to ptsture.
RADIO PIIOGKAMS
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BOYLE'S COLUMN
Ladies To Arms! Flex Your
Muscles, Demand Your Dues!
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (Pi Government's
most forgotten waif Is the Ameri
can housewife.
The hand that rocks the cradle
may rule the world but It I s n't
getting any handouts from Wiin
lngton. And it appears to be the
only one that isnl.
There Is a department of com
merce to help the tired business-
m t n tolri ,
his commercial I
woes. There Is a '
department o t
labor for the !
man. And there
are so many ! 11
poor working ' I , VJ Si
agencies"set up JTjy7
to assist na- -rVv T74tM
ture noble- J
man. uie i arm-
er, that he can
plant his seeds
upside down In
a hurricane and
still make Hal Beyl
money.
But trie re Is no Marshall Plan for
th matrons, no subsidies for house
wives. This Is certainly undemo
cratic, ts there' are more House
wires than businessmen, more
housewives than working men,
more housewives than dirt farmers.
And It Is the housewives who keep
the nation going. They control most
Static
By DAVE I'NDERHILL
How the story grows about "Bo
Goes the Story." Oot another phone
call this evening In connection with
the death of John Neblett.
This evening's buxs was from Bob
Jones who knew the late Neblett
when he (Jones) was working at
the Park Plaza hotel In Bt. Louis.
Neblett was working there also, do
ing some sports-
casting for
PaUtaff beer
company.
Our local In
formant fixed
the 1 1 m of
Neblett't death
as three years,
and th scene a
golf course In
Chicago. Both
Neblett and his
pilot were killed
In the crash.
B n e a k I n a Have iTiMiaahin
about phone calls, there were sev
eral others tonight. '
Who knows when gat rationing
was Instituted, and when It was
baited? If anyone should know the
answer, call 2-17BS . . . Some people
were having a heated debate over
the subject the last I heard.
a a a
Also received a City Brief over
the phone wires. And neighbors. If
you should know of any breezy
news Items thst would make up a
good brief, don't hesitate to call.
I will probably have to hire a
secretary after making that last
statement. But It doe get lonely
here at timet.
Don't get me wrong, honey, this
It strictly business.
a a a
Todsy I in Inaugurating a new
department entitled "How to be a
big shot." The series will run for
six days.
If you want to be a big shot,
TALK LOUD. This proves that you
art a person of force and character,
and must be right.
If It should happen that you and
the other person both start to talk
at the same moment, the proper
technique Is to keep raising your
voice progressively until you have
drowned him out.
Tomorrow's Installment: TALK
FA8T.
a a a
Here are tome "dadynltlonn." A
camel Is a horse that twtllowed Its
saddle.
A Washington war Is on In which
everybody starts shooting from the
Up
And do you know what a miser
Is? Well, he's a guy who moves to
the Sahara desert and start laving
hit money for a rainy day.
a a
And after all that, I tm going to
hunt for the nearest corn patch
tnd dig myself a hole.
of the wealth, buy moat of the
goods pay most ot the bills. If It
weren't for the financial genius of
the woman of the house, half the
homes in America would be bank
rupt In a year.
Kllm Rewards
What recognition do housewives
get for keeping the country on an
even keel? A few kind words on
Mother s Day. a halt dosen battered
red rosea and maybe a dinner out
at the local beanery. Even then the
waiter usually handa her the check,
since she Is the only solvent mem
ber of the family.
But It Isn't to be a bargain base
ment Cinderella one evening ot the
year, and a. grease monkey to a
vacuum cleaner the other SM days.
So mama mopes and feels frustrat
ed and inferior. The kids are going
to school and getting educated: pa
pa makes like a hero because he
sallies forth five times t week to
bring home the bacon. But all she
st doing, she feels. Is chasing dust
and wiping dishes. It Is a drab re
nown, and a small world after all.
Organise!
The answer, girls. It to organise.
A political league of housewives
would bring the politicians running
to reward you for your votes.
Whst do you want, ladies? Pre
seeds for your flowerbeds? A ssb
batlcal leave every four years?
Oovemment-pald maid service o n
Sundays?
Dearies, don't think you cant get
til this and more. And you
wouldn t have to fork over any cash
to the five-percenters.
AU you'd have to do to win any
demand would be to threaten a
country-wide strike. No nation can
live by the can opener alone. And
If you quit wiping Junior's nose,
washing tne dishes, doing the laun
dry or cooking the groceries why.
millions of hungry husbands would
march on he capital to get you
anything you asked.
Ret Alma High
But don't sell yourselves too
chetp. Make 'em dig up tome of
that filthy old gold In Port Knox
and circulate It How about
bonuses? Why not government-paid
trips to Europe every other year to
Investigate what foreign housewives
are doing? And wouldn't It be a
good Idea to create a new cabinet
post secretary of the department
of the home held by a housewife?
And don't forget pensions. Sena
tort get them. Why shouldn't
wives? Senators' wives, too. You
girls Just dont know your own
muscle.
! The World Today!
I By DKWITT MACKENZIE S
I AP-rerclga Affairs Analyst j
.
Madame Chiang Kat-ehek till)
hat faith in nationalist Chinas
ability to cope with the life and
death crisis created by the south
ward sweep of I he victorious com
munist war machine.
The first lady ot China made
tills statement
to me In the
course of a
long converse-
lion I had with
ner in nvw
York. While
t h 1 1 meeting
wasn't a newt
paper interview
lu the accepted
a e n t e ot the
terms. It It per
mitted to give
my Impressions.
Madam
Chiang hat no Mareenal
doubt that the nationalist turcee
will defeat the communist armies
In the southern theater and ulti
mately will reclaim the territories
lost In the north. How long will this
great operation require? Bh doesn't
know; she Is only ture that It will
bo achieved. In support of this
belief she recalled lhat during the
war with Japan the Chinese armlea
were forced bark to approximately
the tame line they now hold and
flung the Invaders back.
She envisages a new China which
will come thruuith moral and spir
itual rehabilitation.
Returning Hume
She It returning home to resume
her place beside her husband In
the attempt to make these tilings
come true.
She haa absolute faith In Gen
et alisaimo Chiang Kal-ahrk. She Is
furious over aspersions cast on him
recently In this country.
My meeting with Madame Chiang
waa at the home ot her brother-ln-
I law, H. H. Kung. the Chinese atatra-
man and International banker. She
I has been In America for some
months on a mission which, I think.
I may be described as thnt of un-
official Interpreter al tills tragic
moment In her country'! history.
In any event she hss had conversa
tions with many prominent people.
Including President Truman and
General Marshall, and rather ob-
I vlously has been presenting the
urgency of what la happening tn
China.
I Madame Chiang's return to China
will be toon, perhapa the middle of
next month. I asked her If she In
tended to resume her former active
part In the nationalist defense, hav
ing In mind that she not only waa
a most Important figure In the
councils of war but actually created
the air force and was lu secretary
general. She replied that was her
plan.
This means Madame Chiang Is.
so to speak, going to get bark Into
military uniform. She long haa been
known as her husband's right hand
his wisest and most trusted ad
viser and his best ambassador.
Many timet she haa won over hot
tile regimental commanders to hit
side. She even hat gone Into the
war tone with money to pty troop
who were on th verge of mutiny.
THE GALLUP POLL
Voters See Red Victory
In China; Against Aid Now
.Fir.v'
PRINCETON, N. J . Bept II
Although th men In the street It
far removed from the China scene
and Is not well informed about the
Intricate and complex situation
there, a survey conducted shortly
alter publication ot the govern
ment's While Psper on China re
veals the following attitudes tnd Im
pressions of U. B. votert today.
1 More than one out of three
(SI per cent! American voter ques
tioned said they had heard or read
about the governments recent re
port on China. Thu figure com
pare with 70 per cent who ssld
they had been following the Civil
War In China, at reported In De
cember, Ml.
More than half IM per cent)
ot voters who were familiar with the
wnite raper ea- tmaawaaaa"
pressed dlsap- ,
proval ol tnt
way th U. B.
government hat
handled the
China situation,
whiit 1 per
cent approved.
Hepubiloant
were consider
ably more criti
cal of the ad
min I s I ration t
China polity
than were Dem
ocrats. Uallup
a A majority of votert with opin
ions think the communists will take
over til of Chins. And among
voters familiar with the While
Paper, six out of ten expressed the
view that the (hole ot China will
ultimately fall to the communists.
e The weight of voter opinion
today It against the U. S. doing any
thing now to atop China from going
communist. However, about one
fifth ot the voters questioned said
they think the U. 8. should still try
to find a way to tend aid military
and economic to the Chinese Na
tionalist In their fight against the
communist forces.
i There it wldespresd belief
among votert thai Chiang Kal-ahek
la not tht man to lead China out of
red dllrmma. A majority of votert
with opinio its hss tn unftvortblt
Impression ot the Oenerallsslmo to
day. a Undoubtedly this unfavorable
I Impression ot Chiang, together witn
the belief that the Nationalist gov
ernment, though anu-communltt.
Is Inept and corrupt, la the reason
a majority of voters with opinions
think the U. B. ahould not try to
pull Chiang out from what appears
to be an Inevitable communist vic
tory. '
These facia are revealed In an ex-
tensive Institute survey, which ap
proached the controversial Chins
problem from many different angles
by means of a series of questions.
In measuring voter attitudes, tht
Institute survey first asked a repre
sentative croaa-atctlon of men and
women whether they had heard or
read about the government's recent
report on China and then asked tn
"oen" or "free tntwrr" question ts
follows:
-Have ye heard er read anything
abool the I'. S. gevenamenl'e rereat
w rhlnaf"
Yet U
No ...a
Two-Uilrdt I ff7 per sent) of those
votert with th greatest amount e
education said they had beard e
resd about tht report
Informed voters, thoae who (aid
they had heard or read about th
report, were then asked:
"What st year opinion of the
way the government ha kandlte
the China sltuallonT"
Disapproval rVerf poor;" "U.
a. blundered." "UB. ahould
have given more help." etc) M'a
Approval ("Very good:" "OB.
did beat It could." etc )
US. should help China . .. 1
V 8. Should slay out ot China 1
Don't know II
All Informed Votert .. loot
All voters, whether they had read
about the recent report or not, ware
then asked:
-lo via think the eomaianaata
will lake ever all et China, er awtT"
Ne
Ye
Ne Oplaw
art
17 14
ALL VOTEKB .
Votera Pamlllar
with Report
"la there anything the t olled
Htalee ahould do. la year opinion, te
step China from going eaatmenM?
Yes:
Vala.
laatlUar
All Milk
Val.fS Bapail
Bend aid In general 1. 11 V
Send military aid 7 I 1
Send economic eld ..4 9
Use propaganda i I
TOTAL YES
No
Don't Know ...
3l
31
..... 4
lttt-a
We
44
10
101 'a
The table adds to mote than 100
per cent because some voters named
autre then one thing.
(The trend of sentiment on aid to
Nationalist china haa been down
ward tine April ot last year. Al
that time, the weight of Informed
opinion waa In favor of greater aid.
In December, I Ml. opinion waa
about evenly divided though more
oppoaed than favored a program of
aid i
The question concerning Oen
erallsslmo Chiang Kai-shek aer
also asked of all voters:
What k your eplntoo et Chiang
Vala, a
taa, lltae
AU f Kb
VatafO Bataft
Kal-ahea?"
Generally unftvortblt
i poor." "weak."
"incompetent lead
er." etc.! k. J4
Ornerally favorable
("all right," and
qualified "waa all
right al on time,"
etc i 11
No Opinion 44
-O yew think the ( ntled Suae
aheald er ahaald net try to kelp
Chiang Kal-ahHi r
Velare
a wite y
B-a-'i
Should . u M
Should not aa as
No Opinion 11 . 17
M
14
N
OT Student
Fund Gets
$500 Gift
On A 1900 donation was mtdt
recently to th OTI student loan
fund by Oeorge Mann of Klamath
Theaters. This donation brings the
fund total to S3300. The fund It
primtrlly for itudenti who art In
financially embarrassed clrcum
stances, and a very small Interest
rate It chtrged to help defrty
idmlnlitratlve expenses.
An unusual and comparatively
new hobby hat developed In popu
larity at OTI. Tht camera tilde
boys have Jumped the gun on the
camera club, holding their tint
session September 10 In the council
rooms. Over 100 colored slides wer
thown. Jo Darnell operated th
projector.
LORES LEO
SEATTLE, Bept. 72 WP) Rob
ert K. Allen, advertising man and
member of a well known Oregon
family, lost hit left leg by ampul-lion
yesterday. Th operation was
necessitated, hit physician report
ed, by a boating accident 11 dayt
ago.
Men,Women!01d?
Get New Pep, Vim
Feel Years Younger
pa fvm Mam. thvu4: wnrn-mt frttt na atraf
ThmtMivia imitl at aliat a liitta poM'plnf up wit
A tVi,
11 he-ait low tn Irn.; .It
Ttwttou lot paa, crania Jaag. taii ?ar r.
At 4rmt alaraa varrwhara 1 Klamath
falla, al Walfraaaa m4 aTarlaaa Vraf.
K a l '
; ' aT
hack's
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