PACE FOUR THE KLAMATH NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON September 18, 1933 THE KLAMATH News KLAMATH NEWS PUB. CO. Publlsneri FRANK JENKINS Editor Publlih.d every morning ex cept Monday 07 The Klamith News PublUhlnt company at 101-111 South Filth atreot. Klamath Falla. Proton- ,, Official paper of City of Klam ath Fella and Klamath county. Entarad aa aacond claa matter at tha post office at Klamath Falla. Oroion, November 1. 1933. under act of March I 187. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier. nrAU .. v Delivered by carrier. t.tQ t.Ot Delivered by mail, year, county ouulda county, year 00 Subicrlptlona payable In advance Represented nationally by H. 0. MOOENSON CO, INO, San Franclico New York. Detroit, Seattle Los Angelea Copies of The Newe and Her ald, together with complete in formation about the Klamath Falla market, may be obtained for the asking at any ot these offices. Member Audit Bureau Circulation Teiepnone imatallinf Practical and Scientific Relief. A PRACTICAL, scientific mo bilisation ot resources and a program ot help and self-help among tha residents ot Klamath county will aerTa a, the founda tion lor the reorganisation ot re MefTn this district. Thus, social service workers in Klamath FaMa haTo been active for nearly a week preparing tor the seasonal demands for help. Tha task of making over the re lief program to fit the recom mendations ot the state field agent comes at a time when the whole state considers the prob lems of winter. It la unnecessary to remark that people ot the el'y and county will be willing to ot ter every measure of co-operation for the Installation ot the best and most effective method ot ad ministering relief. Conservation ot relief mater ials and funds tor residents ot Klamath county will be the chief occupation on the social worker. Individuals and families coming here from other counties still de pendent npon relief agencies will be encouraged to return to their original homes. The social work ers, moro or less united under state supervision, subscribe uni versally to the policy that each county holds the responsibility to Its own residents first. Two things most abundant in Klamath county this year, wood and potatoes, will take a leading part in the administration or re lief. Tha program ot self help will be developed by encouraging those seeking relief to obtvlo these supplies on a share bas t Tha plan will give the idle man soma occupation, keep him warm and assist him In maintaining a food supply. The social worker will not be working Independently. She will ask and need the assistance of all manners of organisations. Although tha requisition system will be in effect, there still will be opportunity for donations. There will be times when the service clufcs, the churches and business houses can all lend a hand in the relief program. Since relief has become such an im portant issue in community life, there probably will be a volun lary offer ot assistance. The program for relief grad ually being Installed la Klamath county is not new or untried. It has been found successful In oth er counting ot Oregon. It Is care ful, conservative, economic and scientific It adapts Itself to con ditions and becomes an Indtspens Ibla agency ot aid. Henry Ford, Proponent of Individualism. THE picture ot Henry Ford hid ing under a canvas cover and riding out ot his summer camp aboard a trailer presenta a rather ludicrous story of the differences between the automobile maker and the national recovery act. The Incident is uncomplimentary to both Mr. Ford and the NRA. Mr. Ford la not Interested In hindering recovery, but It must be admitted his attitude la not one to influence the success ot NRA. Still It le not entirely Justifiable that Mr. Ford should be subjected to excessive criticism, when he is able to go beyond the wage pro visions ot tha automobile manu facturing code. It must be remembered he pays a fifty cent minimum. In compar ison with the forty-three cent minimum stipulated for tha In dustry. The industrialist's chief objections to the code, press re ports describe, have been against sanctioning employe organisations within his plants. This has bees something foreign to Ford policy. But regardless ot these differ ences, the dispute between Ford and the NRA represents a strug gle between the traditional indi viduality ot American business and manufacturing and collec tive regulation. It cannot be said Ford repre sents the type of employer who subjects his workers tor profit. We but have to recall hla an nouncement, coming at tne peak of the depression, that all wages in his plant would be in creased. The conditions In bis plant make it appear as though displaying the blue eagle were but a formality, and Ford a sin cere objector to interference. Had there been gross violations 0! 'he automobile code, then there would have been Justice in coercing this one major manufacturer with criticism. The NRA Is a program tor eco nomic improvement not ecot-omlc oppression. It should be admin istered sanely and all hysterical Incidents eliminated. It should be sufficiently flexible to permit Individual action and not mob spirit and public spectacles. It doesn't appear as thonih the last two upheavals In Cuba can be dignified as first-class revolutions. Autumn is the most healthful season of the year. September ts the best month in autumn. Reach your own conclusions. Maine loses its prestige. By voting for repeal it followed rath er than led. Air aupremacy Is somehow In separably linked with air spee't Since the dawn of history those people who possessed the best and fastest transportation have led the world. Major General Jaine? E. Fechet, U. 8. Army (retired). The NRA Is dptilsnpA mi ih. simple principle that 100 men earning flO will spend more money than one man earning 11000 and 99 earning nothing. General Hugh S. John3on. The Staff of Life v '-folk Qi:h " WASHINGTON New Behind the Newt The Inside Story From The Capital see By PAUL M.iLLON Copyright, 193S, by Paul Mallon WASHINGTON, 8ept, 11 The tip has been passed around the most select circle mat the prying Mr. Pecora has dug up another one ot those stock lists. It contains some fancy new names not mentioned heretofore. Two or three were among those who laughed loudest when their brothers-ln-sln were pilloried by publication of the Morgan and Kuhn, Loeb lists last spring. This new list Is supposed to Involve the sale of a tire com pany stock below market levels. Iuvestlgator Pecora Is expect ed to spring the list whsn of ficials ot the issuing house are hauled before the senate stock market committee early In Octob er. The house la not the fore most in New York but In the top bracket. No criminal accusatlona will be made. But political reputa tfona will be challenged. , It will give the people some thing to talk about besides the N. R. A. e e CTXXIXO Every time Japanese Ambas sador Debucht comes to the state department now, our diplomats hide. Debucht Is ambassador to Cuba aa well as Washington. He can be very annoying in a nice way about the Cuban situation. He Inquires about our progress down there In a most naive tone. The fact la the Japanese real ly want us to intervene. 1 They have an idea it would Juatif what they did In Manchuria. The matter has become such a Joke that there has been faceti ous speculation about Japan protesting against American vio lation ot the Kellogg peace pact, e a a INFLATION The popular thing to say here now Is that inflation la coming but that it will not help much. That Is what Agriculture Sec retary Wallace has said. It la also supposed to he the prlvata view ot Bernard Baruch. now on his way back from Europe. Aside from that, it is probably true. The point Is that Inflation talk probably doea as much or more good than Inflation. It keeps , buying up, even In the face of increased prices. People believe prices are going atlll higher. They are glad to get, goods even at existing Increases. That explains the astounding way retail sales kept going dur ing the past three weeks, a, e a FORD'S SIDE The Ford side of the code story is not being told, but there is one. The following comes from an Influential Detroit citizen In a position to know: "If Ford'a factories In Detroit alone were organised and the union dues were tl per month, it would mean $50,000 a month for the union. The money would not come from him. His wage scale and laboring conditions al ready are as good or better than the code demands. His employ ees would pay. . "His scale since 1913 or 1914 has generally been higher than any union scale. His hours have been shorter, his laboring con ditions better. "If all the manufacturers throughout the United States had followed Ford's example, the necessity for Gen. Johnson's acti vities would not be apparent." JUNIORS A Junior brain trust has sprung up backstage here. The leadera are three news men. Two are closely associated In a friendly way with General Johnson. The other is a news man who has tied up with 8tatd Secretary Hull. They act as outside men for their respective patrons. Their activities have actually altered the course of government pro w0 cedure In many secondary In stances. e e Nt'tMil Someone la trying to build a fire under Chief ot Staff Mac Arthur, hero ot the battle ot Auaroatla. The war department la dally besieged with queries suggesting MacArthur la resigning, in each case War Secretary Dern patient ly saya MacArthur will be chief or start until the end of hie four year term (November, 1984). MacArthur has friends among tha influential democrats, see NOTES , I The Detroit authority aays It all industries there were union ised, the union revenue would amount to a quarter of a million dollars a month. e Ralph Morrison. Ban Antonio banker and delegate at the Lon don conference, bellevea the con ference will reconvene within two years with aome prospects ot success. That would Indicate we are not going to have a atab illsed currency for a long while yet see What the state department de sires above everything else la to get out ot Cuba before tha Pan American conference (at M011 tevldo) meets in December. It lemembers what happened at the 1928 conference when the mar ines were having trouble In Nicaragua. Incidentally Mach ado helped Charles Evans Hughes save that conference by planting handpicked guests In the gallery and eoftsoapiug the Latin Ameri cans. There ,1s no one of Hughes' stature on the scene now. Also It would take a lot more aoap. When you think about the battleship Mississippi being In Havana harbor, remem ber the Maine. Editorials on News (Continued from page One) cities these days. Klamath Falla Is one ot them." That sounds pretty good. doesu't It? MR. ENGLISH Is looking for a man to represent this con cern down in this country. He lays down this as his principal specification: "The man we want must be ot such standing, reputation ana presence that when he entera an office whoever he goes In to see will know that because be rep resents It the proposition he is going to put up must be all right." 1 j e e e TF THIS writer, who la an em--ployer In a modest way, sees that man FIRST, Mr. English won't get a chance at him. Men like that are scarce. "TT IS unfortunate," said Mr. ''-English, "that a great deal ot money has been lost In thla com munity, aa elsewhere, in unwise investments." "That Is true," this writer re plied, "and to a certain extent men like you and concerna such as yours are responsible. You should have been using more NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING to familiarize the public with the difference between aound and un sound Investing." If more ot that had been done in the years when people had money to Invest, much less money would have been lo3t In unwise investments. Earlier Days (From Files of the Klamath Re publican, September, 1909) H. G. Wilson, superintendent ot the Klamath Indian reserve tion, assisted by Mrs. Wilson, left thlj morning with 13 boys and girls for Riverside. Calif., where one of the best Indian achools on the coast, the Sherman Institute, Is located. The children will con tinue their studies there for the forthcoming year. Among thiue accompanying the Wilsons were; Misses I.obert, Hill, Stokes, Craw ford, Knight and Owen, the Allen children and Horace Hill. Today Is the day for the ladles of the city to go to the Monarch Mercantile company store and enjoy a cup of delicious Tr'.e Tea or M. J. B. coffee, to be served with a delicatessen luncheon. Ev erything free. Telling the Editor KLAMATH FALLS. (To the Editor) I wish to mske a few remarki In regard to the recov ery program In Oregon. For pub llcatlon, It you can kindly sparo the space. It seems to ma the ones at the head of things are using a great deal of their time and energy trying to figure out some way to finance relief organisations. What they need Is Job and payroll or ganisations in Oregon. The work ing people of Oregon don't want relief programs; they want a Job at wages high enough to make NERVOUS WOMEN Take Lydla E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound ."I em so aenous tt seme as taenia I houul a" , , . "My turae are eUes flee" . . . "I wlih I ware daad" . . how often have wa heard lhaae elpraf. ilona from eome woman who has bacomi o tired end run-dowa that her aerval can no lonsar stand the strain. No woman should ellow herself ft drllt Inte this condition If ahe can haia hanalf. flha should give Lvdla g, Pink, ham's Vcstable Compound a trial. Pol nearly alt ty yaara woman have takan thai womlarful tonic to gits then renewed itrcnsth end Tlftor. ts out ot stary ISS woman who resort to na say that ther era beneltod br thle medicine. Buy a bottle from your drua tw saaw ... sad watch the results. SIDE GLANCES by Gcor& Clark "You see, we have rather neglected Sidney'! education, think ing all along that ha was going to Inherit money." them soma buying power. It ! the unemployed In. Oregon were put on that kind ot Job that would end the relief .program. We would not need them any longer. President Roosevelt has been trying to get the states to speed up their work projects, so as to help the buying power ot the working people. The working people would buy in September or any other month It they bad any money. Let's not get the re lief program habit In Oregon, but try Job and payroll organisations for a change, which will furnish the buying power and end the depression. The Job and payroll for the working people Is what makes any city or community prosper ous. . So. let's hare bigger and better Jobs and plenty of them. The business men ot Oregon can cre ate Jobs easier that they can get financial aid for relief programs. ifery truly yours, J. F. WILLIAMS. Sitting back in your eaiy chair and looking over the adg in the Herald or Newg it not only the eagiett way of finding the home you want BUT it' aUo the beat way. It would take you days of ruinous street tramping to look over the variety of opportunities you can cover in the pages of the Herald or News in half an hour or so. Each ad contains the essential facts and from them it's easy to pick those that meet your requirements and look them over in person in a very short time. (And don't forget it's also the easiest way to sell or rent a house). You're surer of getting just what you want when you check through the CAPITOLISMS The Story of Oregon a e Hrralil-Nrwa Writers at Salem View Bute Attain. (By United Press) SALEM, Ore., Sept. 13. Any old Iron today? Tha ta,a a, rt.j .... 1) I , ) - - V. UIS,UI .,,, witi- clally enter the Junk buslnvs September It, when the highway commission will ssll to the hlgn est bidder miscellaneous accumu lations located at I'oqullle and La Grande department shops. AC I .a flranita ,m Inn inn, nf scrsp steel, 80 tons scrap castlron. vv pounus aluminum, sou nnunrfa ai-ran hrnn. Inn nm.n.i. scrap copper gaskets, 130 old ra diator cores, 40 tons old tires, 35 old car batteries. For sale at Coqullle are eight tons scrap steel, 10 tons sorsi, NEWS and, HERALD WANT -ADS Iron. (00 pounds scrap aluminum 400 pounds scrap bronse, 33 oil radiator cores, nine tons old tires. one serviceable 13-ton crane, e e e Population of tha Oregon elate insane asyium atooa at i.isu ai tha first ot September, according to report of Dr. Lee Stelner, su perlntendent. Men'' patienta number 1,153 women 903. Listed on books of the asylum are an additional 337 patienta on parole and (3 who es caped and were not recaptured. Thirty-seven patienta were die. charged, paroled or transferred to other Institutions during August Twenty-four died. New admissions numbered l(. ot which 34 were committed by county courts, one entering volun larlly. Men numbered 33, women 3.1. Ages of the new patienta range from 30 to 30 years, with majority past middle age. Occupations are varied. They Include laborers, fishermen, min ers, farmers, painters, Insurance salesmen, real estate operators, accountants, book agents, drug gists, clerks,, muslo teachers and housewives. Commitments from counties In clude: Clatsop 4. Marlon 10. Clackamas 3, Klamath 4, Lane 3, Linn 1, Jackson 4, Cooa 3, Mult nomah 33. see Co-operation ot Governor Julius L. Meter and other officials in aiding the National Recovery Ad ministration in Oregon was praised by General Hugh S. John son, administrator. "Please accept our thanks tor promptly organising the state re covery board." Johnson wrote to Governor Meier. "We appreciate Save time, work, money Guide fify Phone 1900 your active co-operation," A record number of buntert from more than 13 states are ex pected to enter Oregon fores n MeplKinbnr 30, when the dear sea son opens, officials of the ata' game department repotted. inquiries from at far away a. New York city have been rei-lv d at the department's office Many applications for hunting licenses have been received from residents of California, Idaho and Washington. see A determined drive to oust "fakers" from the publie relict rolls la being waged by itate of ficials. Persons found accepting aid from relief agenclea when they are not In actual want, will be prosecuted, Should persona wits saving bank accounts, life Insurance petiole- and other "aassts" be found on the relief rolls, several of them will be "made examples of,"- a state welfare worker told the United Press, v We plan to give aid to tha really destitute," the official said. We want to divorce the relief rolls from the work rolls." rote OES PRINT "J U M P" BEFORE YOUR EYES IT you wear bifocal of the ordlpaey alnaVthey are likely to causal "Jump of vision" a vote swltctl from looking out eftdlstent objtts to reading yourlpener. Youlmay become accuMovped ts) this Vjumf but Itrqulrs extra ensrgyVrcJsiyouryes Today there la Vsqew bitocVT better for distance and better lor readlnf, that minimisea the "Jump." NEW FUL-VUE BIFOCALS Arthur M.Simmons Optometrlet Klamath Falls, Or.