Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 05, 1952, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
FRANK JENKINS
Editoi
Entered u second class matter at the post office ot Klamath Falls, Ore,
on August 20. 1906, under act of congress, March 8, 1879
MKMBERS OF THfc ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the usr for publication
of all the local news printed in this newipaper u well as all AP news.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall : ( months 16.50 By Mail year $11.00
H iri.Wi i nffinnm i liiuiirin.i i It ii i i
By DKIl ADDISON
IN ONL' EAR AND OUT THE
TYPEWRITER (Burt Hoyio's ex
periences as a veterans admmistra
tion OI farm training instructor):
The VA launched an investiga
tion that mBde their hair sland on
end. Unfortunately, this hnlr slowly
settled back Into place with hardly
a hair changed.
Some of the things they found
were:
That some students had been
coming for about a year e.nd did
not even know that they were sup
posed to have field trips. And yet
the records filled out by the in
structor showed In blsck and white
that he had been visiting him regu
larly for eight hours every iiionth.
The Instructor who visited none
of his students but who did come
to cla.vs so we can say that for
lour or eight hours of his time
vou, the taxpayers, were paying
him as high as tlOO.OO an hour.
Probably over 90 percent ol the
students are In the school for one
reason onlv, nd that is the i.io.icy
they get out of it. The remaining
10 percent would only be there hall
the time if there were no money
Involved because often the level
of instruction is so low. .
Under the provisions of the VA,
the moncv paid to the trainee has
to be paid back to the VA if the
labor income of the trainee went
over a basic figure of about $2300
annually. Needless to say. many
vrere the methods used to show in
the books that the trainee did not
earn over that amount. I dc-iy any
of you gentlemen to walk past the
GI school on any clcss mgnt and
by looking at the cars pick out the
NEW YORK Wt It Is a thing of
terror xand strange beauty to see
a great city abandoned in wartime.
H was that way a year ago this
week in Seoul, when the Alies
yielded the Korean capital to pad
tied Chinese soldiers who came
across the hills like waves of walk
Ins quilts.
The fear of their coming spread
Invisibly before them. Hundreds of
thousands of Seoul civilians had
been leaving for days, marching
south in straggling columns of
death and hunger.
But the military decision to evac
uate came suddenly. One morning
the correspondents watched a Brit
ish battalion make a calm and
studied counter-attack against the
enemy 18 miles norm of uie city.
But when we returned late that
afternoon the press camq was
breaking up and the order went
out:
"Pack and leave Immediately.
, The Army is pulling out tonight."
Several correspondents, Including
Dwight Martin of Time Magazine
and myself, decided to remain ov
ernight and watch the withdrawal.
It gave us an eerie feeling as
we stood at the entrance of the
empty Hotel Chosun, one of the
largest bostelries in Korea, and
watched flames licking at the n;ws
paoer plant across the street
Fires began to break out all over
4he city and a smoke pa'l quick
ened the twilight. Night fell. The
pavements echoed with the roar
of tanks and guns being wheeled
out of the city.-It seemed impos
sible that mere msses of enemy
riflemen on foot could force all that
vast weight of metal armor baclc-
wr.rd but they were.
The fires mushroomed Into acres
of sininT flame. Outlined against
them were the pitiful .lines of ref
ugees. Many too weak to continue
collapsed and lr.y unheeded.
We bucked the end'ess traffic
back up to the front. It wasn't so
far now. A colonel said:
We're pulling out ourseives in
WASHINGTON W Almost 68
now, President Truman still is chip
per although naturally he loc':cs o'd
er and more drawn than when he
moved Into the White House Just
short of seven years ago.
And as he demonstrated again
yesterday at his news conference,
he's peppy as ever with an im
portant change in firing back an
swers to the questions tossed at
him by reporters.
When he "first took over the Pres
idency he had a habit of throwing
out answers macninc-gun fast, so
much so that sometimes, it seemed
he d,l it without fully consicer
lng the consequences. Some of the
ol. the cuff answers backfired and
embarrassed him.
That rai-a-tat-tat technique may
have been due to sclf-conscious-ncss
because he was new in the
Presidency and trying to show how
fbreast oi the Job he was. In time
he learned to be more careful.
Now, whllo still Just as fast in
answering, he's slower on the kind
of answers he gives. And recently
the President has seemed a little
slow in action too.
Weeks a;m, when the scandals
J'ere popping around Washington,
he told a news conference he
planned a clean-up. He mav still
be planning it. But he hasn't put
It Into operation yet.
After ma'tlng the statement, he
nmckly got Judge Thomas Mur
phy of Kcw York to agree to head
the lumlestlcn board. Almost as
quick y Murphy changed his mind
rnd declined. Since then nothing's
happened.
Then there's the case of T. La
mar Caudle, assistant attorney gen
eral, whom Mr. Truman fired after
a House committee, which had
been ltttlng the lid on the scandals,
had qulzaed Caudle.
Later Mr. Truman said he had
SSS wloo to Caudle for some time.
Which raised a question: Why the
delay In firing him? Why was he
Mmji& Vftwdoiv
1 ABC's :
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
ir i ,., y 1li 'iii- 'I int illi in .1 l fnfc iJtl 1 1
low Income, needy students.
And then there is the matter of
the shop. There are actually thous
ands of tools missing from It, and
I do mean thousands.
Now who is to blame tor con
ditions being what they are? All
oiiicials. from here to the Sai;
Francisco VA office, knew what
was going on. And yet, on at least
one occasion. VA officials inspect
ing tills school have given it a
complete whitewash, declaring it
was a model school and being well
run.
But let's not be too ha.sty about
criticirins the oilier fellow. Let's
looi. ground right here at no.ae
I could name a dozen prominent
business men, farmers and leaders
who know the conditions. There are
members in both of your local vet
erans organizations who know as
much about these irregularities a
I do. There are men in this room
who know.
We are proud of our community I
and its achievements. We hove had
i earns of good publicity and v.e
love it. Wh should we try to gloss
over and cover up what so many
of us know is happening RIGHT
HERE, In the vain hope that it
Kmtimrn. lpf s start at nome.
..... i ' J., . l
iV' '!B."'i',uL"',A. '"I
zzrsETJ, i JTsrtir z
general in Chicago
crooked, that tax collector in San
Francisco got Involved none of
these lives anv ol us. as mdivia-
uals on the bottom rumr of the
ladder, licenre to be disaonest.
This Is our community. Let's
keep it one to be proud ol.
half an hour. You'd better leave."
Tue hills and pado.es held a dark
menace. Everytnme was lonely and i
unreal, and the unfought fires 1
threw frightening shadow's. An or
phan boy wailed, all alone and for
gotten, on the city hall steps.
We picked him up and drove back
to the hotel and ruled come blank
ets to keep him warm.
At the last command post In
the city some soldiers were eating
a Christmas fruitcake that had Just
arrived. They shared it with us.
"it's a iunny tiling," said a young
captain, "but I courted my wife
in this very room. I was stationed
here before the war, and my wife
worked for an American civilian
agency that quartered its women
employes in this building.
"I used to meet here here to go
out on d.ites. It seems odd to be
back here. I wonder what she's
thinking right now."
And ever since then I've won
dered whether the captain ever got
to teil her about his last night in
Seoul.
We bedded down until morning.
We toured Seoul for the last time.
The rattle of small arms could be !
heard on the outskirts.
By noon the lat Allied unit had
trundled out of the smoking city
and across the two bridges span
ning the Han River. About 2 p.m.
U.S. Army engineers blew the final
bridge, and one said: ' wen. mats
the last we'll ever see of Seoul."
That was the general feelinz
among the Allied Army then. Many
officers and men then thought we
would have to give up Korea en
tirely and withdraw to Japan. And
there w-as bitterness in their going,
for while they had known little Joy
in that weary peninsula they had
no wish to be pushed from It.
But they formed a nev Ime and
held it. Today we hold Seoul again,
too. And if a real peace there
still seems far away, well the sit
uation is much better than it was
on that night cf loneliness anl de
feat a year ago.
continued In his job until the com
mittee quizzed him?
Tlie Republicans promise that the
scanoals in government will be a
big issue in this year's president
ial campaign. If Mr. Truman vig
orously tore Into a search for
wrongdoers, he might take some
of the wind out of the Republican
sails.
But Congress comes back next
and if Mr. Truman sits back and
lets Congress take the play away
from him by setting up some fum
igation crew of Its own. Mr. Tru
man can hardly be credited with
smart politics. .
Defense Plant
Orders Cut Tax
SEATTLE Wl Lamb-Weston,
Inc., of Weston, Ore., has been
given a "certificate of necessity"
lating by the Defense Production
Administration for expansion of
military food storage facilities.
The U.S. Department of Com
merce said Friday it is a J.222,241
project. The certificate gives the
firm the right of a quick wrlte-olf,
for tax purposes, of 25 per cent of
the cost.
A 65 per cent quick tax privilege
also was announced for a Boeing
Airplane Co. 508,191 expansion in
Seattle.
Anti-Red Parades
Draw Denial
GUATEMALA. Guatemala Wl
Interior Minister Rlcardo Chavez
says the leftist-dominated Guate
malan government has decided to
ban anti-Communist demonstra
tions. j Chavez made this statement Fri
day night as anti-Communists were
completing plans for a national
convention In this capital Jan. 27.
They'll Do It Every
'7M A eoco excuse Y "WC MAYOR NO
-T -rucv mm ff SWtl6 OUT ALL J SC 85 BALLPlAyZR v
-Sk'nvpe iirSsl Fl Krren SPEECH NOV Tk WE SUSTC OP HOJOR, to sell a &LL
TO SPEAK AT TUBS L- i u,,-, PlSiSiP
tjif?;-3 t uy? r ' wrriL mom l f listen to mm ,
L' l II III I .S VSifr&f?l I !U
23 mrwmm
a. -AyTN T-r-- KsSy T 1 l-J TELL KXJ HOW I
I 1
JACOBY
on
Canasta
"When is It a good idea to dis
card wild cards?" aska a Dayion
conespondem.
There are several situations in
I1U H O OOUUU ,
WliU miUS, ill'. .ic ...5 lu
u.c ci ti, tiia. you have a
c '
S00"1 reai0n (or doin s0
aoiug so. , mit.al me,d ThRt ,s hol(1.
ena oi shand. with lng out u not big enou,h l0
:as 'eiL"l.rfie iiS!8've -vou complete control of the
..-..u.-s ie
onlv a few cards
- y 0 cards
to run the deck out safely.
. -n ii vou cio noi have as many
wild cards as you will need to last
y - J' - i --- Plr--'i 1;,nla .De
lor ycu to mrow on '"'"f-
w.c mi'. " -
end of your wild cards, you may .
.,e cJier deuces to throw, or you ,
may have other aosoiu.ejr Mie ,
oiscarci".
If you have frozen Uie pack of-
ie..c.j. quue sound to o.s-;
card additional wild corus UM Ice
pat... iLu im.
expect to w.n Uie pile a3ain (as-
summg tha. you .ia.e .ouiid
!rlat,a .S
c-.-i. will come bac to you later
on
Moreover, you are miuii!
in your hand for more natural ,
crwt v.h.c. wui improve your
chance of winning the pile. Such i
o.is ulsu g:ve no Information ,
to the enemy. - ,
vails when your opponents have '
i-i.cn ueiensr. eiy. ill m.s suua-,
tion, they do not hope to win the
piu;.. i.iey merely hope to las;
out until one of them can meld
ou. o.- unui the stock pile is ex -
haus.ed. It does you no harm to
c. your uueces and jokei's to
make room for natural cards.
x. u i.ei-cm wise to discard wild
Karri. rn Iho f:i-st Hicr.srrl nilA hp.
lOio en.ier s.ae melds. The side I tmee from the slock. What should ' PARIS ifi French sources said
that wins that pile will run up alx Uu besides swallow an aspirin?" , Friday thev have received uno.
u.g koii, but you cannot be sure The hand is pretty hopeless and j Hcial reports that Red China has
enough that it will be your side, au ou can do Is trust that ' your ; concentrated 200.000 soldiers with
A possiole excopt.on to ui mle partner holds somelhing better. battle gear In areas Just north
occurs when you need only 60 or i i0ur oojeci is to discard safely In of the French Indochina border.
oj oji and tne opponents need the hope that your partner can win : These sources said they did not
120 points. If you have several ! p,,e; ycu also aim to keep believe Red China would attack
..a..-., eijjciailv a "sururise" Dair ! cnm. ths,i m m.th vnr I Indochina while fighting continues
or two, you might well invest a '
c-.u c. two ui ins pue.
The wrong time to get rid of
yo v.il. circis ,s when vou run!
out of safe discards and are Just : should oe the Jack. This gives very
-j-i U t.avi oil oisaiter for one j ULtle Information to the piaver at
more play. It's bad enough to lose .your r.ghi and it is the safest pos-
tiie i-.-c, but it's worse to g.ve slble high discard. At your next
up your wild cards and then lose ; turn, you might try out a live ii
this gets by, you will probably be
' - abia to throw all of the fives
When you have mde your first! quite safely.
.nn', h in hurrv to I v.,ii'P uii nf ihix I- onhn on
use up a wild card in Uie attempt
u .e a scona caiita.
That wiid card may be more j
iicu.iii in v.:ii in mdriintr nUt Or in
freezing the pack. As long as you !
-ei-p aueucB or joner in yuui
hand, you can choose your tactics; I
t.i-t you nave mciaeo 11, your
play is forced.
- P,.-, ior example, that both
sides have melded canastas and
iia.e metdeo iairly freely. The op-
ponen'ts have a canasta of sees,
..iiu j-u nave a canasta ot kings,
Your sice also has a meld of five
H 1. i-..a a .,oer.
j ; u . ...... .. -i-k, I
a.iu catii jjiajrbi s"tu
ca.u.-i in his nana. You draw irom
the stock and then hold:
. j-J 3-2 I
You haven t seen any nines or ,
Jacks, so it woulu be dangerous t
to discard one ol loose cards. Youisponen up? Did I have the right
n , ui:ciu an ace, because that
would give the pack away at once.
. lou are following the official
rules, of course, so the onpenent at
...' ..t can pick up a card that!
matches his closed canasta.)
Should you meld the deuce to
complete the canasta of queens?
iou Will then have one safe dis
card the black three.
.iie answer is that you should
not meld that deuce. Just discard
tne biack three and await develop
ments. ii your next draw is a safe dis
card, you can throw it and main
tain your position. That would have
been possible, of course, even if
oa hita molded the deuce. But if
your next draw is an unsafe dis
card, you can use your deuce to
freeze the pack.
Then your aces will be safe dis
cards, and you can probably last
until the end. You will give up the
canasta of queens, to be sure, but
tne ability to play safe may save
you two or three thousand points.
"One of our recent games of
Canasta brings up two problems,"
writes a Milwaukee correspondent.
"I won the first discard pile, con
slating ol about twelve cards.
There were five Jacks In the pile,
but the top card of the discard
pile (used In my Initial meld, nat
urally) was a king.
"First, do experts throw so
many cards of the same rank Into
a pile? Would you expect to find
live Jacks in a pile of only twelve
cards if all the players were first
class players?
"Second, is it a good Idea to
meld some or all of those Jacks?"
First, expert.i very often throw
the seme rank all around the
table. If It looks like a safe dis
card It may be thrown by one
side that hopes to win the pack.
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH
Time
If it looks like a worthless card 'to ;
hang on to. it may be thrown by :
a p.tyer wno doesn't hope to win
the pack but merely wants to I
ju!d up his hand. ;
Second, It Is a very bad Idea to
meiu any of these Jacks. In a
poor game, the opponents may for- i
(sei you have them If you Just
save them In your hand or d s-
tia.. r. coupie 01 uiem. nui even
in a good game, they should not
ue meiaea.
If you won a pack of twelve
3,, yQU probaDly W0Und Up wllh
' nhnut fifteen nr clvfoi Mrrii at:
nhnt fift1(m nr c Vfon Mrric aft.
i er Vu ilild mafle vnur irrpdilrih'.ft
pile.
You can afford to discard
i0i..'w ann fhi,c mnira r, r.,
j fjr,een or sixteen cards that w.ll
igive ycu a good chance at the
discard pile. If you maided the
i.c., juu wuuia men nave oiny
aDout (en cards l0 use jn thiJ
ii,-i.jigle.
jMy partner, needing 90 points
lor the In.tlal meld, put down
thrc;! aces and . Joke.-, Before
, i-uaibl ne uext put QOwn two
kings and tried to move the Joier
to maKe a ineid witn uie
kmgs. The opponents said he could
Inc. mo.e thi jofcer. He said his
w.sa-1 finished una he had
art,eo. Who is right?
A The ounon?nts are rlcht. The
jo-cr part 01 a legal meld to
begin with. The rule says that no
ca.-u 01 . legal meid may be shift-
ed to any other melu. The Jo :er
muse stay with the aces. The play-
er must do something about loose
meld of some kind.
x
"What Is my correct plan of
discarding wttil a rcai hw-adache
j mm.'. " asks a Montreal reader,
1 "Both sides needed 120 points, and
1 U2a!t Uie following choice
assortment:
1 K-v-9-b-i-6 5-5-5 4-2.
"The uncard was a Jack and II
n-o .. . ... . ..... ..1.... T ;
partner s band in case he decides
'in meld ou cklv and Dlav for a fast
ou..
(. tim riUrrHm Korea, Irejing masses of coin-
careful attention to the discards of
joli- ic.i-nand ODnonent with s
view to choosing safe discards
l&ti rn. iXnt"h imii. nolnar'o
discards also, because you may
nave to matcn his dlscaras In tne
hope of keeping some cards in I
you. nana mat will nelp him when'
' lie finally melds. j
j The black three should be saved
- for a rainy day. You may very :
well run out of obviously safe uis- i
I cards, and the black three will be
la lnv saver at that time. j
Q We were piaying a five-hand
game, and i was on the sidelines
. ii. --.. . t-HH"""'to. V..1C
w vcticiiui inauc nil 1IL1UI11-
cnt meld. My partners didn't no-
tice It, and tney played right
along. The other opponent did no-
tice the error but failed to call
i.tisn.. o.i to it. Should she have
iv up in mis situation
A It Isn't necessary to call at
ten.'on to your own or to your
partner's Insufficient meld. Mind
you. it would be terribly unethical
to make an Insufficient mi-ld n.
noerateiy. But if you accidently
make the mistake, there's no need
to wake the opponents up about it.
Its up to them to keep their eyes
open for mistakes. The Inactive
player has no right to say a word
in this situation. He is Just a spec
tator for that hand.
Driver Faces
Wreck Charge
YREKA Gregory C. Valles, 24-year-old
Weed railroader, was ar
raigned In Veed Justice Court
Thursday on charges of manslaugh
ter and driving on the wrong side
of the highway.
The charges grew out of an ac
cident early in the morning of Dec.
23 which resulted In the death of
two persons and Injury to seven
other?, four of them seriously.
Valles was transferred to the Sis
kiyou County Jail where he has
been released on S2500 ball.
Killed In the accident, two miles
south of Gazelle on U.S. 99, were
Wilson E. Bordner, 35, and Mrs.
George Ward, 30, both of Seattle.
HOTELS
OSBURN HOLLAND'
EUGENE, ORE. MEDF0RD
Thoroughly Modern
J Ir. and Mrs. J. E. Earicy ' '
Proprietors
and Joe Early
FALLS, OREGON
By Jimmy Hatlo
VMUDEMLLE
TO S4y,,,W4IT'LL:
TELL KXJ HOtV
WRQSRSO 'EM
SQOEcTIXW!
THAHX TO 'ELBE.?
Casey Tibbs
Top Cowboy ,
DENVER I Casev Hubs of
Ft. Pierre. S. D.. Fridnv was
named all-around champion cow
boy of 1951 by the Rodeo Cowboys'
Association.
Figures released by the associa
tion here showed that Tiibs amass
ed a total of 29,104 points. Each
point Is equivalent, to a dollar
earned.
Jim Shoulders of Henrietta. Okla.
was runner-up wllh 21.244 points.
Bill Llnderm.111 cf Red LodRe, Mont.
was third with 23.666 points.
I Tlbbs. 23. was top-money winner
in both the saddle bronc and bore-
. back riding division. Inst year,
Shoulders is the bull-riding cham
pion. Don McLaughlin, a Smlthvllle,
Tex roper was jU,?cd call-roping
chamolon. while Duo Phillip, o.
Ea AnRcl0, Tcx., won me bui.
do-uln-r tlttr
I Everett Shaw of Stonewall. Okla.
; , , .,.r.rni0 rhnmnlon. Olan
! i 7 C C wan
j chi nuTion afan rnt which
; Savor" S I ' I." the far west-
iern siatcs team roping.
.n, ut .ir,
, vlt h0fe ,or ln(. chs,.
, "? m r hie the National Western
i U? EhoWBgd Roieo In Denver,
I f ,
( JBJ1' " .'. n...rd .,,em this vear
' ... ,,' .A vn rodeos aunroved
by tlie RCA.
French Report
Troop Threat
i In Korea. But they said they were
' -' "
I munist Chinese forces lor action
'n Sou China,
The French fears were echoed
by olncr Unllcd Nations delegates,
some of them from Southeast Asia.
lwrt "f"? s"ve' Foreign Minister
And"' Vishinsky mention the
troubled areas of South China,
1 Burma, Thailand and Indochina
j ll)il!'!acy'J , . ,j ,., "
; . "-."-."'-
strued Vishlnsky's veiled words as
direct threat of Communist action
! falnsl tnose countries sooner or
FDR Wins On
Poster Issue
DFRBY Conn Ml Thp Board
late president Franklin a. bookc
velt's name shall remain on Der
by's World War II honor roll.
In a way that Is a victory for
Chateau Thierry Post. Veterans of
Foreign Wars, which Insisted It re
main after John H. Collins Post,
American Legion, demanded the
removal.
However, the aldermen, acllns
after a committee failed to resolve
the dispute, decided FDR's name
should be removed from the list
of this city's war dead Bnd placed
at the top center of the roll "to
make it more apparent and vis
ible." Legionnaires said their position
was that the late president was not
and never had been a resident of
this city. The VFW insisted his
name should remain because he
was commander-in-chief of World
War II forces and a "war casual
ty." 14-Year-Old Gives
Birth to Baby
NEW YORK I Mrs. Geraldlne
Hudson, 14 years old, gave birth
yesterday to a six-pound, 14-ounce
son.
Both mother and baby were re
ported to be "doing fine' at Metro
politan hospital. Birth was effect
ed, by Caesarean section.
The mother and father, San'ord
Hudson, 19-year-old machinist,
were married last year after an
elopement to Arlington, Va. Then
13. Gcraldine did not give her right
age.
Hudson said he and his wife had
been neighbors and added:
"It vrtii Just one of those things.
We fell in love and didn't see any
reason lo wait."
MIRRMK
oom In the Hemal i
I V 357 E. Main I
Ford Price
Boost Okayed
WASHINGTON OP) Tlie govern
ment Friday approved higher cell
ing prices for Ford Motor Com
pany passenger cars.
It refuted, however, to grant the
full price asked by the company
under tho Cnpehan amendment to
mo ticunoimo Controls Law.
The higher celllnnH apply to Find,
.Mercury and Lincoln automobiles.
Tho Olflco of Price Stabilization
said the company has not Indicated
whether It will put the inuruuaca
uilo otlccl.
OPS approved a 4 91 per cent
hue in prices of Ford curs, com
pared wllh 8.39 naitcd by the com
pun), for Mercury curs, a 3.45
per cent hike was approved, com
pared with 4.37 per cent asked.
For Lincoln. S.19 per cent boost
was okayed, compared with 3.13
per cent requested.
Arizona. Seeks
New Grid Head
TUCSON, Ariz. W The Uni
versity of Arizona has slarted a
long series of Interviews to soleeu
a new head football coach for the
coming year.
Among tho.e who have been men
tioned lor Hie poitt Is O. A. iTex.l
Oliver, hWhly succosmuI Arizona
coach of the '30 and former coach
at Oregon. More than 15 ioiicIioh
are expected to apply lor the Job
led vacant when Bob Wlnslow,
former University of Southern
California end and assistant coach,
resigned.
Growth Of Klamath Falls
And Surrounding Country
Depends On Development
The first of a series of Inlornia-, During the dry years of 1919
tlve programs on the problems of . through 1937. the runoff above Keno
development of water resources ol
the Klamath Basin was presented
to the Rotary club Friday noon at
the Wlllnrd hotel, by Frank Jenkins
and Laton Stephens.
Jenkins, Herald and News pub
lisher, opened the program with
the statement that If the Integrated
development ot the watershed Is
carried through, Klamath Falls will
become a city of 13,000 persons and
the Basin will become one of the
richest areas on the Pacilic coast.
To substantiate the statement, he
said that we must look at an In
tegrated program standing on three
lc3s: agriculture. Industry and
power.
The development of the approxi
mately 200.000 presently Irrigated
acres saved the Basin Horn an aw
ful Hop at the end of the rough
board sawmill era: we are looking
ahead to Increasing that 200.000
acres to a half million, plus an
additional quarter million In the
Yreka area.
Industrially, we haven't even
scratched the peuk. he said. The
best estimates are that 42 percent
of our original timber stands arc
Intact; add lo this the newlv valu
able stands of white fir and jack
pine, In a new period ol wool utll
l7.allon that will quadruple the man
hours work per log. and you have
the Industrial potential.
The Klamath river, the second i
power stream of the coa.si. has a
million KV hydroelectric potential,
which now Is unused.
"It Is a challenge to the best
minds of the community to get over
our ruckuses and Integrate the
three legs of this potential develop
ment," he said.
He added that the time Is past
when we can put our water po
tential "in the safe:" Unit the water
must be committed to beneficial
use within the next five years or
else.
Laton Stephens, manager of the
bureau of reclamation here, read
parts from the bureau's protest
brief which was filed with the pub
lic utility commission at the hear
ing last year on Copco's applica
tion for 25,000 second feet of water
tor hydroelectric use In the Klam
ath canyon.
Tlie brief set forth that lull de
velopment of Irrigable lands In the
Basin would require use ot all
available water In dry years leav
ing none for power development.
The bureau's legal right to the
water is based on the act ol 1U0S
which gave the United States rights
to all water needed for Irrigation.
Stephens said.
The estimate of potential use Is
based on irrigating 10,000 acres In
addition to the present 191,000
acres In the present project, plus
use for Swan Lake, Sprague River.
Klamath Marsh, Butte Valley, Red
Rock, Pine Flat and the Klamath
Indian reservation.
"HOMETOWN NEWS"
Presented By First Federal
Savings and Loan
MOVES TO 6:15 P.M. SUNDAYS
Following ABC's Walter Winchell
STARTING TOMORROW NITE!
Now You'll Have 'Hometown News'
Every Nite at 6:15!
How a Top Reporter Suffered
And Drove Nazi Uaptors iNuts
......'.u , tflllt,,linrhitinn ftaetilArf In l.t.
.... mill !.' SIVi:itH
Newspaper work la far from be
ing the rollicking, davll-nmy-care
and ndvenliliNonie profession ninny
of our movies and radio programs
would have you believe , , . But
the lire of a newspaperman dues
Inivo lis iiuiiiicnls: and I know of
a few Iril" newspaper stories thl
ihiil Iho wildest of HI"" or ''110
J"A"frw mlniilCB ago, llmiubliw
through papers on the rxehange
luble, I noticed Larry Allen s by
linn over mi As-wlntrd Pros story
oul of Saigon. Indochina.
l,arrv and I were broken to
newspaper harness aboul the same
lime buck In Houlhcrn Wel Vir
ginia, l.iiirv ut an AP man In
Ihe Charleston. W. Va. bureau and
I was cutting my nosey Journalistic
lerth in neiuliy Ilunllngloil.
F1IIST TO ! ,
World War II got under way In
Europe and long belore America
acluiillv bpciimo a parllclpiiiil, U.H.
newsmen were clamoring for war
corrrapomlrnt ' assignment. Allen
unlimited lo work his way Into line
and eventually bcc.une tlie Ursl
U. 8. reporter accepted as a light
Inn rone correspondent by the Brit
ish Navy.
Lurry couldn't swim stroke
then timd still couldn't the last
lime 1 saw him) but somehow he
ninnnKrd lo survive having mire
nuinnurd lo survive nnving uirrs ;
wui-.liliw sink lienentli him in the;
... ii.m ,lt tint' nf
Mediterranean In the early days of
ltu war.
Fliinllv. however, his luck ran
out and he was raptured bv Mus
solini's Italians. But Uie Italians
siniDly couldn't hold Allen; three
times, he escaped and wss recap
tured. Alter the third escape. Herr
avcraued 681.400 acre feet annual
Iv. the brief brought qui. Potential
need for 738,000 acre feet tor Ir
rlitallon, without considering
Sprugue River or the Klamath
Marsh, would leave an excess of
143,400 acre feet. Adding the Indian
reservation, not choiikIi water
would be uvulluble from exist Ins
storage In some dry yeurs to do
Uie whole Job for agriculture.
Stephens commented that he had
not painted as glowing a picture
as Jenkins. "You can't hsve your
cake and eat It too."
Ho pointed out that there Is a
place lor power development, and
that the bureau needs low cost
power for pumping such as It now
buys from Copco under a contract
which will expire In 19J7.
Both men pointed out that there
Is no fundamental conflict In ob
jectives, nnd that it Is up to the
community to work out the knotty
nroblcms of development ol lull
water use after agriculture hat
been served.
R. R. "Rube" Larson was chair
man ol tne auy. l.l. loi. wnancs
B. Eggnn was Introduced as a new
member of the club, wllh the clas
sification of Government, Public
Defense.
A n.w, one-day
4M LAUNDRY :
rM SERVICE! j
f . rf
"BUDGET BUHDIE" ffi
10 Big Pnfc OQt p
M Washed i Dried O 1 1
Each Additlonel l .
rm I
P1! MEN'S HAND
:L- .. ""'f".J
KFLW ABC BROADCASTING
COMPANY
SATURDAY. JANUARY B. ll)r2
mttci o'mii. to. tn'v ,,.,'u in lata
l.u.irf Miirf rn'flniH AIImii -III.,,...,
to Germany. Kn route, Larry
caped again by plunging irom
speeding train. But again, tie wan
rncnnllired mid when (he Unrmann
finally did get the troublesome re
porter In one of their prisons the
kept Mini until he was repatriated
lale In the war.
Allen never became a wllliut
captive, lie cnut.ad the Nn?.l so
much trouble thnl It Is prohibit
lie was Included In one ot the liui
butch of eiNmiwo prisoners Inr th
very good reason lie was driving
his captors nuts.
'NKWHI'Al'KIt'
For one thing there was I.uny'i
prison "newnpiiper". Honioliow I n.
ry niansged to nbtnln and Itciii
piiMte.-mltm of a small hliii'iiljoanl
AllhoiiKh Lurry was confined in
such iiinuuer lliat he could talk Id
Irw other person , , , mid In a
cell wllh windows so high he ctiulii
nut nee nut ... he did miinK
to frequently "publish" his noun
paper. He allied ill the prison scut,
tlrlitlll that ciiuie his way, adilnl
and subtracted and was amnxinuiy
accurate In colling the turn uu
some ol the ImporlniU things that
were vlunlly happening on tha
war fronts, Ho lettered his IiihIiiiks
on his blackboard and rlrculairu
the news merely by holding the
inutnuuniu uu u m- -n in
for nil within eyesight to r.'iui
tvhrn Allf-n u-um riutiriiftrl In
UIMtltiMJai ti till in ui" i t'll w iiiutiw
,. i... n ,. ..., a. ,v .m . , .ii. i
tt.'l.M,. AIIm.. U'.ih r.M, .. I I-
"in" r,,i .. a.,..,,,,.,, in ui
tl. M. he cime lo Las Veuaa hIimm
I wns editor of a smull mornuut
dully. He h(t suflcred so from hn(
long anil tortuous Nail Imprison
ment that 1 wouldn't have known
hint If ho hadn't greeted mo firm.
He must have been 30 or 40 pountli
under his normnl weight and his
once healthy complexion had Indrd
to a pasty, lifeless gray. Hut the
Hamlng spirit lit I refused lo Irt
him sy "uncle" to the Naais w
still glnnmlng in his eyes,
iu:(0i:iiv
For several weeks, Larry playrd
life to tho hill In tho casinos and
clubs of Lbs Vrgus. And no aim
begrudged him a minute of his luii
... He hsd a lot of fun and fur
grttitig coming to him.
Then he bcnn dropping Into my
Utile office more and innia Irr.
auently . . . Watching the ncm
1st came over the telolypes . . .
Now and then batting out storiri
on my rickety typewriter. The lifii
to got back to work was beginning
to trouble hint.
So one day he checked In at A I'
headquarters and asked for an as
signment. And nothing easv-golni;,
either: he wanted lo get back in
the thick of things.
tie was first assigned lo Prsmii
lo marh wlU with the Commumtti
who were then tightening their
stranglehold on the Cteclia. Thru
It was t:gypt and Larry suffered
a broken arm when he was beaten
by rioters. And now It's Indochina
und the war between the Frencn
and Hie Communists.
TWIMiKS
I'll never sea his byline that I
won't feel a twinge ol envy. Per
haps, to many outside newrpaper
circles, It will be pullng as in
why anyone would envy a life of
so much sufforlng and peril. But
It's no pur.r.le lo me nor lo thmi.
sands of others of my prolesslonil
clan
Larry, the lucky atllf, got tht
breaks to -t where he Is . . I
And he had the stuff to com
through when the big blue chlpi
were piled high.
Happy lines, fellow, wherever
this might find you I
eWaW,,, eiMlW,,,W, WMW