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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1941)
THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. March 13, 1941 The Klamath News KLAMATH NEWS PUBLISHING CO, Publisher! Spring Skepticism SIDE GLANCES FRANK JENKINS , Editor MALCOLM EPLEY , ,, Managing Editor Published every morning except Monday by The Klamath News Publishing Company at Esplanade and Pine streets, Klam ath F-l 1- rm PAGE FOUR Represented nationally by WEST-HOLLIDAY CO, Inc, San Francisco, New York. Detroit. Seattle, toe Angeles, St. Louis, Portland. Chicago. Vancouver, B. C Copies of The News and Herald together with complete Information about the Klamath Falls market may be obtained for the asking at any of these offices Entered as second class matter at the post office at Klamath Falls, Oregon, November 13, 19-Z. under act of March 3, 1879 Member Audit Bureau Circulation Telephone 3124 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Official paper of City of Klamath Falls and Klamath County Delivered by carrier, month .... $ 75 Delivered by carrier, year $7 50 Delivered by mail, year. In Klamath, Lake, Modoc and Siskiyou counties , Delivered by mail, months Delivered by mail, 3 months . Subscriptions payable in advance. .38 00 .33 33 .3321 Legislatures Cause Concern AHAT to do -bout legislatures seems to be a question T T that bother the people of more than one state. We have heard, for instance, arguments in favor of a split or .bifurcated session for the Oregon legislature "because California has it" Under this plan, California legislators meet for introduction of bills, go home for a while, and then return for action. It has always sounded like a pretty good plan to us, but apparently not everybody likes it. The Sacramento Bee,. in a current editorial, says the "bifurcated or divided session . . . has served to delay and befuddle legislative action." The Bee favors a constitutional amendment to eliminate the split sessions and have the legislature meet annually lor not more than 60 days, instead of biannually. Now that the Oregon legislature is approachine- the end of another long-drawn-out session that went well be yond the 40 days for which, legislators are paid, there will probably be talk about doing something to change the Oregon legislative system or sessions. Discussed here some weeks ago was the scheme for pre-session organiza tion oi tne legislature, so that presiding officers could be named a month ahead and the ways and means com mittees appointed for immediate work. A "legislative committee" device has been suggested again by the Salem Statesman for between-sessions operations to speed up action once the legislators get into session. Probably some changes could be made for the good of the state. The present method of running over the 40 days for which the legislators are paid, and then end ing up in rush and confusion, is not satisfactory and is not fair to the legislators or the state. Some constructive thought is needed on improvements. Second Biggest Gold Pile THE vast treasure in gold buried at Fort Knox, Ky., naturally occupies the thoughts of all who are gold- a unuea, na most men nave Deen for at least 2000 years. "9 iqrgei mat tne second largest gold pile in the world is also in the Western Hemisphere, buried under a uiuuuuim in waiuwque, picturesque -anunean island .where Napoleon's Josephine was born. The Caribbean has seen dramas before on 'the theme of gold, when English naval raiders and free-lance pirates i- guiuen Bireara inai passed through the Panama bottleneck on the WAV frftTtl Am AVIS a Cnein The French, jt now appears, got a billion dollars' worth of gold aboard a cruiser in 1940 just ahead of the in- y.uiug nnn, ana alter some thrilling adventures, landed it at Fort Saint Louis de Saix and Fort de France b.. iuarunique, wnere it is now buried. We knew that the United States had most of the worlds gold. But this story makes it plain that the .Western Hemisphere has practically all of it An Army Travels On- MAPOLEON achieved quite a reputation as a wit by sagely commenting that an army travels on its stom ach. Not today. In 1941 an army travels on wheels. Only two years ago the total number of quartermaster motor vehicles in the army was about 14,000. Today, 75,000. By the end of April, 140,000. By next fall, 286, 000, which is the number needed for an army of 1 400 -000 men. Incidentally, in an army of that size today, nearly a third, or around 400,000 men. will be either drivers or mechanics driving or servicing trucks, tanks, passenger cars, or motorcycles. To "git thar fustest with the mostest" today, you have to roll. G T DEFENSE IRK March IB, a significant date for federal income taxpayers, Is also the deadline for first quarterly payments of 1941 real estate taxes In Klamath county, it was pointed out Wednesday by: Allen Sloan, deputy sheriff in charge of tax collection. Taxpayers who pay -their whole year's taxes on the first quarterly payment date will re ceive a deduction, while those who do not pay at all-on that date will be charged Interest, Sloan pointed out No interest will be charged If first . quarterly payments are made on March 15, and other quarterly payments are met on time, he added. AMATEUR Barney Oldfleld. famous race driver, never drove an automo bile until a few hours before his first race, yet he beat the world's champion by half a mile. Vou can learn to do anything If you're willing to do anything to learn. - - - Clues Found in Girl Slaying KANSAS CITY, March 12 UP) Police Chief L. B. Reed said to day that the butcher slaying of Leila Adele Welsh, 24, was near ing a solution. "After two o'clock this morn ing," he said, "the police depart ment received some definite and positive information that seems very encouraging in this case. Of the maze of clues and tips given us so far, this seems to be the best yet." Reed said special investigators were working on the slaying of the girl, who was hammered and slashed to death in her bed dur ing the dark hours of Sunday morning. FARM MEMBERS CORVALLIS, March 12 VP) The appointment of two addi tional farmer members to the state land use planning commit tee was announced here today by William A. Schoenfeld, dean and director of agriculture at Oregon State college and chair man of the state committee. The two appointees, both of whom have accepted, are Ralph Laird. Eugene, representing the upper wuiamette valley, and C. W. Wendt, Medford, representing southern Oregon. Registration of the American Legion auxiliary's half million women for voluntary emergency service will be conducted on March 15, Mrs. Konnie. presi dent of the auxiliary unit here, has announced. " Auxiliary women will fill out questionnaires similar to those answered by members of the American Legion on February 22. The questionnaire forms are being sent out from national headquarters to the 9100 units throughout the country and when answered will provide the auxiliary with a complete list ing of the capabilities of its members for service to their communities and the nation. On the questionnaires, auxil lary members will list their availability for service in many fields, including automobile driving, nursing and first aid, canteen work, entertainment, social service, office, household and administrative work, sew ing, knitting and mending. Jun ior members will be listed for messenger and guide service. One copy of the form will be retained by the local unit, while the other will go to state head quarters. Each unit will be ex pected to organize a corps of volunteers workers, prepared to meet any calls for emergency service which come to it. The individual members will be as signed to the type of duty for which they are best qualified. This corps will work in clcse cooperation with the voluntary service organization of the Le gion and with the Red Cross. It will undertake services simi lar to those being carried out by women of England should the necessity arise. The program is being directed nationally by a new national committee, headed by Mrs. T. Louis Chess, of San Mateo, Calif. Similar committees are being organized in each state. On Buying Trip Keith Moon of the Town shop, is in San Francisco on a spring buying trip. He will return Friday from the south. Circuit Judge David R. Van denberg has received his first appointment from the supreme court to sit on a case outside his Judicial district. The judge has been assigned to the case of New York Life In surance company versus Menke maler, to be tried in Lake coun ty. Attorneys Sit In on Kalplne Strike Parley Negotiations In the nine-day old Kalpine Plywood strike con tinued Wednesday with John B. Ebinger sitting In as counsel for the company and Ben Anderson of Portland, attorney firm of Anderson and O'Brien, acting for the union negotiating com mittee. The parties were in confer ence throughout Wednesday morning and met again at 2:30 in the afternoon for further parley. Previously counsel for both sides in the labor squabble had been withdrawn, leaving the issue solely up to the company and the union. Anderson said union recogni tion was the only question In volved in negotiations and claim ed the CIO union has designa tions in excess of 75 per cent IVelson Sentenced To Pay $100 Fine ' Hector Nelson, Indian convict ed of drunken driving, was sen tenced by Justice Joseph Ma honey Wednesday to pay a $100 fine and $35.35 costs. Justice Mahoney departed from his usual policy of jail sentences for drunken drivers in deference to a request by the jury In the Nelson case which asked leniency for the defend ant. The Jury In a note append ed to its verdict said its recom mendation was based on testi mony as to alleged brutality by Officer Jack Hope in the Nelson case. PUBLIC POWER GROUP EXTENDS As near as we can figure It spring Is about three tons away. NOW PLAYING DOUBLE HIT SHOW-. . "A NIGHT AT GovuM" COMPANION FEATURE WARNER BAXTER IN "Earthbound" NOW PLAYING Joan. Bennett Joel McCrea TWO IN A CROWD' ACTIVITY HERE The Klamath County Bonne ville power committee has been expanding Its organization and activities in the past two weeks, according to A. M. Thomas, sec retary of the committee. Organ ization of sub-committees In com munities over the county is un der way. and will be followed with more organization work in Klamath Falls. Within a month, Thomas said. It is planned to have a mass meeting In downtown Klamath Falls. The Immediate objective, he explained, is an educational cam paign to acquaint the public with the Bonneville power program and its potentialities for this dis trict. Arrangements, he stated, are being made with the county school superintendent's office for showing of a short version of the film, "Hydro," in the schools. At a recent meeting at Shasta school, more than 300 attended for a discussion of Bonneville. BurreD Short Is chairman of the committee, and Ned Smith is vice-chairman. 617 Bicycle Tags Sold to Date Six hundred and seventeen bicycle licenses have been Issued to date, according to informa tion received from the office of David Bridge, city recreational officer. This is an increase over last year when 436 licenses were issued up to this date. Number 600 went to Elbert Stiles who purchased five license plates for machines which he operates. From Merrill Mrs. E. E. Kll patrlck was shopping in the city Wednesday from her home in Merrill. Falrview PTA The Falrvlew PTA will have a rummage sale April 4 and 5, the place to be announced later. COMING 1 with lighting punch and power! Ft-wl- Tu ML,. ipalt law ru ;Iiu,vv -lOIOT YOTJM UXDOIM " -ICOTT-TUttRMaiUIOU- DUNMMOt PINE TREE WASHINGTON, March 12 What frequently happens to strong new senators who come to Washington with a determin ation to do thlnits for the public weal Is Illustrated by the de cline and full of the famous El lender amendment. The cir cumstances surrounding Its eva poration into thin air ran now be told on unquestionable auth ority. Senator Allen Ellender of Houma. Louisiana, was deter mined to nail down the presi dent's British aid policy with a firm ban on the use of American soldiers abroad. He had a lot of encouraging mail and worked hard among the senators to gain support for his way of making the lend-lease bill acceptable. So successful were his labors that he counted 56 votes sure, a majority of at least 8. a few days before the vote. Then State Secretary Hull got busy among friends in the senate. Next day Mr. Ellender had 52. The third day he had 48. But he still thought he could win as there were sure to bo some absentees Then he was approached by forelitn relations chairman, Wal ter George, in charge of the ad ministration forces. One of Senator George's election cam paign speeches saying he would cut off his right arm before he would vte to send boys to Eu rope again, had been brought up in the debate. But George held with the administration that the Japanese would interpret as sign of weakness any effort to impose Ellender a policy on the president. He sought a com promise which would not tie the president's hands against defense of our far eastern possessions Administra ion Leaders Bark ley. Byr.ies and Harrison worked on Mr. Ellender for certain mod living language. Ellender con sulted the legislative counsel who indicated the new language would not emasculate his pur pose. A friend. Senator Over ton, also said this. So he took the compromise. But instead of changing the amendment so it would not ap ply to the fur east, the com promise said the lease-lend bill did not change existing law ex cept in the ways it changed ex isting law. Most senators and outside observers agreed It was meaningless. ' TAX OUTLOOK Speaker Sam Rayourn was not fooling when he said this congress would wring SI. 500, 000 more out of you in taxes for next year than you are paying now. A check of the house ways and means committee shows the authors there know fairly well what they intend to write. About half the increase. $750,000,000. will be squeezed out of mid- bracket Incomes of 15000 to $50,000. Where $35,000 now pays about one quarter of Its income, it may pay nearly half The other $750,000,000 will come out of corporations through increase In the present 24 per cent normal tax and In addition al excess profits taxes. tor good measure all those nuisance taxes which were abandoned a few years ago, will be revived and hiked, (levies as on checks, etc.) RUSSIAN MYSTERY Mr. Roosevelt's European watchmen have not been able to make out clearly what Russia is up to either. Of one thing they are positive. The anti-Hitler turn indicated in Stalin's note to Bul garia was a phoney. By telling Bulgaria, after she let the nazis in, that she should not have done It, the tricky reds accom plished two objectives: (A) The strong Bulgarian communist ele ment was kept in line with Mos cow for the future, (B) the so viet escaped their pledges to the Bulgarians by blaming it all on them. FAR EAST Matsuoka's trip to Berlin Is Dill "Vou feel sorry for everyone who slops here to aril you oructhiog now all we Imve to ilo is tlnd u sales in un to - iict rid of this junk I" Spokane llejptN Public Power nt Municipal Poll SPOKANE, March 12 D A proposal for a public power dis tribution system met defeat for the second time In five months at the Spokane polls yesterday. Voters registered overwhelm ing disapproval of the plan tor the city to purchase Grand Cou lee power and distribute It wholesale, either In competition or through the purchase of the system of the Washington Water Power company. The vote was: yes, 17,279; no, 26 609. WASHINGTON, March 12 UP) Threat that Grand Coulee power would not be sold to the Wash ington Water Power company of Spokane, unless It binds Itself to distribute It "at the yard stick rate prescribed by the adminis tration" was made today by Rep. Rankin (D-Mlss.). Rankin said In a statement he had been Informed that the pri vate power company had carried an election In Spokane on mun icipal distribution of power, which he said meant that the majority, by the vote, had said It did not want "the benefits of cheap electricity from Grand Coulee." This power will be distrib uted at Bonneville yard stick rates to people in surrounding territory but not one kilowatt hour of It will be turned over to private power companies to rob the people of Spokane or any other community with exorbitant overcharges In their retail rates," Rankin said. "Unless this vote is reversed It undoubtedly will be the great est setback the city of Spokane has ever received. We do not propose to have Grand Coulee 1 power handled by any agency that does not bind Itself to dis tribute It at yard stick rates prescribed by the administra tion." JUDGE DENIES KIRK III FOR RE-TRIAL Circuit Judge David R. Van denberg Wednesday over-ruled a motion for a new trial In the case of Luther Joe Kirk, convict ed of the second degree murder of Leonard John. Defense Attorney J. C. O'Neill had asked a new trial on 16 grounds. Including a challenge to the state court's Jurisdiction In a case Involving two Indium. Kirk will be taken to the state penitentiary at Salem Thursday to begin a life sentence. His at torney may file an appeal to the state supreme court. Deputy Sheriff Dale Mnttoon. who will take Kirk to Salem, will also take Robert Wilcox Rhodes to the penitentiary to be gin a two-year sentence for lifr voluntary manslaughter.' Lady Eagles The Lady Eagles club will meet Friday, March 14. at FOE hall (or a I o'clock potluck luncheon and business meeting with Maude Larson as hostess. All members arc urged to attend. Police Court Five drunks, one drunk and vag. and six traf fic tickets made up the Wednes day morning police court report. being advertised as a fraternity get-together of two old axis pie uiiers. Actually ne was summoned. It is known at the ton here that Hitler Is trying to Induce his far eastern Mortimer Snurd to create a diversion against the United States In the Southern Pacific. But Mautuoka will not move until he gets an anti-aggression pact with Russia, and the red price Is high. Stalin wants the Chinese Eastern rail way and the Sakhalin lilanrii oil sources. Hitler might buy a pact from Russia with a niece of Turkey but he has not much else to sell. Betting here Is running even money that Matsuoka is wasting uie lare. NOW PLAYING t knlani fyaftsMf iC -an if i $i"V Mi'i o big swsIsms V- "4 COMING FRIDAY-SATURDAY " FraaeM FrMMf Ro-iwwi mm lil-NM!-r,l'('l HLE'iJ ill -LI I I mT NOW 'Ira! ..i !.?. ti'l T . "Whm Willi's mM Awm" YOUNG . LS.TI1T NSWI iM OAT FKHHtn I" ToMINGT AnoWjAwegHORAGOB L.rT'v, AND THE SEASON'S ' MfKT MlllBinilC GAGSI amr. .v pelicaT