The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942, May 13, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    II
PAGE FOtTt
tub NEWS ANT THE HER ALP. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
May X 1!41
i
i
The IIlamath News
KLAMATH NEWS PUBLISHING CO,
rRANK JENKINS .
MALCOLM EPLEY
Publisher
Editor
Managing Editor
Published every morning except Monday by The Klamath
New Publishing Company at Esplanade and Pin streets. Klam
ath Falls. Oregon
Represented nationally by
WEST-HOLUDAV CO, Inc, San Francisco. New York. Detroit
Seattle, Los 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. 1932, under act of March 3. 1879
Member Audit Bureau Circulation
Telephone 3124
MIWRIPTIOS RTES
orftrtal r&pr of etc? el fclaaats rtlla to aiianl CMaty.
Daltvaftat by errtr, per most
IMim4 by vail. pf jw, ki KUmtth. Uka. Modal sad Slalljoa OouU
IVllwrd It? nalL RHitlha
VWt4 by malt. S oaaatha .
SaNacnpuooa PafaM bi Adit
.
S.V
.SI.
I Am An American!
XAHAT does it mean to be an American citizen?
t V On May 18 millions of men and women in the United
States will be thinkintr about that. The day has been set
apart by congress as "I am an American Day," honoring
especially those who have attained full citizenship dur
ing the past year either by having become 21 years old if
native born, or by naturalization if born elsewhere.
But every American ought to think about it, too, in
these days when to be an American is a precious privilege.
What is it, to be an American?
It is to be free man or a free woman in a free land.
It is to walk unafraid, fearing; no one. secure in the
knowledge that before the people' laws all are equal.
It i to think, and read, to speak and write freely; to
leek the truth without hindrance; to breathe the air of
a great, free land that (till belong to the people who
inhabit it.
It is to be governed under a constitution adopted by
the people, which they may change at will, and under
law passed and administered by public servants elected
by the peoole. It is to have a vote in these things equal
to any man's vote.
It is to look one's neighbor in the face, be he rich or
poor, and to know oneself a good a man as he.
It is to worshio whatever God one finds in the heart,
and to worship Him as conscience dictate.
It is to bow to no authority but those which the people
themselves have ordained and maintain.
It is to grant freely to fellow-American all rights and
privileges one asks for oneself, and to expect as much
from them.
. It i to keep for oneself certain corners of the mind,
certain phases of intimate and personal life, secure
against a state to which the people themselves have
aid "Keep Out!"
To be an American? It is to be a man. or a woman,
before men and before Cod. with the dignity which God
breathed into man when He made him "only a little
lower than the angels, and crowned him with glory
to 'if f u ' nV: 0x-4
II 1 A lit l . X ' M Xt c. I
, reV't
1DIITII nnRnlflTrn !Grmun nrmnu nnniiTPnn iTrrun
i in i. uv .ii- ir7;7"":::r' msb hu i
a ww wwiii iu i .tv ins ntur wicie UUUU I LIIU (11 I L.IIU
LL'U llll in rii Berlin. May i2 ,-Gtr. mrnnrR nv RirrT
tvtnht L vrr
NrZWSi
taNDS
By PaulEUllon jffi
SIDE GLANCES
YASHINGTON, May 12
Congressman Cox said he
wanted tu freeze Mr. Stettinius In
solid as director of defense pri
orities, but he froze him Into a
cube in the refrigerator of the
army and navy munitions con
trol board.
The Cox amendment was de
signed to give Mr. Steltinius in
independent legal stains where
as he has been functioning un
der the uncertainly of a re
trievable presidential executive
order. That was what Mr. Cox
told the house when his amend
ment was unanimously adopted
to the Vinson bill.
Ho did not need to tell the
house a bigger and better rea
son why this should be done.
In the corridors nearly every
one had heard how the defense
price cudgeler. Leon Henderson,
had ioslallcd a man in the Stct
tinius division to take over half
the priorities, dealing with civil
ian needs. Another reason, true
or not, was afloat in the house
before the vote implying that
the president s Man-Friday Hur
ry Hopkins, might be installed , . .
in Mr Stettinius' position be- " T """ -""""""" '
fore long. h"
So the unanimous decision of v " "ouse
the house really represented aval Chairman Vinson intends
mild revolt against the cont.nu- lo bt'rc committee
nee of unreserved presidential , ,." """ "' '"
Ul 1.1 1. Will 1IUHII (III . vjll tlllf
if" Iffk
eo mi a, aaa iwki acq u 1 ptr ef. -'S
'How enn I loll my kiml-hrnrtcd nun! that she's wonder
ful and I nerd new school iiilir mid th.it my fallui's
turned crabby, all in 10 words'"
discretion in shifting the defense
1EBIC1I1 DAY
and honor."
THAT is what It is to be an American. That is what we
I celebrate on May IS. That is the ideal to which we
dedicate ourselves.
Where we have fallen short of it. and the instances are
H' , 1 .tne measi""e or our failure to achieve in full
According to a bulletin Just
received by Hex Putnam, super
intendent of public instruction.
CHEHALIS. Wash, May 12
iPi A 21-year-old former Chi
cago department store worker.
BERLIN', May 12 Ger
man troops have occupied Melos
island, in the Cyclades group 75
miles north of Crete, authorized
German sources announced to
day
Four Klamath Falls scouters
Melos is the 12th of Greece sptnt Ust S4"""1' nd Sunday
Frank W . Turner, was convict- Cyclades islands w hich Germany , ' McKenzie Bridge CCC
ea oi second-degree murder ana iiaiy nave announced occu- camp attending an emergency
Saturday night for shooting his P'cd thus far. service corps training program
well-to-do. 44-year-old wile to The seizure of Melos. the Ger- 1Ven by the assistant national
death last December 30 a few mans said, "completclv sur-i? , . ' " "f"01"'
weeks after their marriage. j prised" 118 Englishmen and 200 r of health ,nd 5a,e,y of
ine superior court Jury de- t-reuns who were found there1"' t3" scout of America.
EXTRA SENTENCE
! But in working toword this
I laudable democratic purpose.
the Cox amendment added
final sentence reac
powers (of Mr. Slettmius) shall
be exercised by the director on-
liberated more than five hours. , and taken prisoners
A second-degree conviction usu
ally carries a sentence of from
20 years to life. No date was
set by the court for sentenc
ing.
The prosecution charged Tur
ner shot his Wlfj in doath "h.
cause he wanted to get pos- V 1,le K" "aicnea ; tended. The trainlne was for
y they held .""" " "uao- ... ,the purpose of coordinating all
. . . Hfceou council emergency servir enm
the Red Cross disaster
. ENOUGH'S ENOUGH
I BEATTIE, Kas.. (AP) Clar
;ence Chapman's pigeon did her
best.
I A hen laid an egg In the .
Those going from Klamath Falls
were Howard Boyd, P. A. Ev
erett, William Burgess, and
Owight Gilchrist
This course was for all scout
ers in the western part of Ore
gon and some 40 volunteers at-
sesslon of the money
" ju.... wgjik avwuiu. I . . . . vuuiia.
Turner's father, Maj. Fran " '? lne ,PaV , with
j .
, . . . , awi, iu auii woj. ,. ... . , - - ' uic neu across aisasier
the task we have set ourselves, thia mn W. . Turner, disabled eav.lrv nff,r growing chick, but finally gave eommi.. a .i
People ever undertook. formerly stationed in Panama UP ln nd kicked the ,h. t ti-in. -v.-..
: formerly stationed in Panama
Our failures as well as our nis.... n-. "d more recently at an army
take them to ourselves, and looking at them squarelv, each i Xn h, IIaZ":.
ofjanyet say with pride. "I am an American !" ' JltLV
infant from the nest.
Pilot Assigned to Test
World's Largest Bomber
collapsed
verdict. The
son received his fate in tearful
silence.
Young Turner, who attended
school in the Canal zone, went
to Chicago about a year ago to
visit his mother. While work
ting in a store there he met the
DAYTON. O. M.v n a-TK i..... . . . iformer Anne Bode, who was
fSm.rtiyJ, , ""ni. " lew months later. tnen married to a man named riarv.nn
omaruy-groomed Maior Stanlev Maior ImsiraH ha. k. .ki. o.. o. ,.. . t-iarxson,
- - - . - ... . ' 11 vn,-a r cicix-H. ouuruy a: It r fcier-
M. Lmstead, who In civilian at- f . Wright field flying sons death. Mrs. Peterson and
.mrel. "ke a Wal1 1bnch.ul "36. , Turner came west and were
street executive than the army's ! Test'ng the huge B-19 bomber married
ace test pilot, tackles his biggest "1 dull the lustre on all of Ma-1 A few weeks afer thev
a5si5nm'nt ns SfAT,le''i'i Po1- moved into their ranch home a
The Wrieht IMA fi;.,. -v.i- Plishments. He said he ne..,.i . j
leaves Monday for California to T the Jb n dded that Turner blood-covered body in
put the world s largest bomber 5. 5pen seml n her home.
the gigantic Douias B-19- t" pl"le' ; Turner P1" innocent by
through its aerial paces for the A . d. Bu,nkfr-. he( reason of temporary insan.tv.
.Ume- fo"DrriouiIea,,10'i' and ,ha- he d" nd
The giant ship, which weighs ings hit wm Jr, "1? ta.1d" irresponsible. T h e
82 tons and has a tail that scales numerous wT.hVf il " court ,old " uld "
42 feet above the ground, will tWJl- htS b'e'n'. find Turner insane because the
. """ ""- oeiore rf.f.-.. h-j f.,ia , ,i,.
the type of training that should
be given to the scouts.
success ' tne fea,urcs of Sun-'
rnvtciivT t. 'd,y morning was actual prac-
"''"".Ung system under the pervi-l
sion of forest men. :
setup. It was in fact a move . .
to get back some power into ,
the hands of congress bv re- AXIS INROADS
quiring any future presidential i A secret axis freight plane from J. W. Stiulelmker. I S coin.
appointees to the priorities of. service has been started across ' nussmner of education. May IS
fiee to get senate approval t.Mr the South Atlantic. Reports bos been designated ' I Am An
Hopkins probably cculd not get picked up within this govern American Duy." Schools
it.) ! ment Indicate It operates from ; throughout the nation are plan-
some African point near Dakar. ni"K to iinimniue and rririirate
wiin iuinan pianei carrying ....... ,mi-ku,-
Cirrman products. The s h i p- 'iiht of attention is to be turned
menu arc restricted to valuable " ,h" contributions of various
nroHu-i .m.ll hulk in ihr races and nationalities to the
'J,., .'w! pharmaceutical and chemical , American way of lile
iding. Such f The day preceding May II
w . ., . ought to feature the contribu
The axis Is apparently work-, . " , .,,, ,, .,.,,"
I.. . . itnif it Inr nrnmusnil, .. H ft i '
iy mier prior approval oi sucn t"- C zechoslovakllill. Polish, Greek.
exercise by the joint army and America. Operation, can-, Cn Japanese. German
navy munitions board." : not be extensive, but the effect j a u s t r 1 a n French Kalian
Thi. would not onlv freeze J? about ,he me" '"" ,h Serbian. Negro. Spanish. Scan
Mr. Stettinius rhetorically but KalM-r "nt v,rr d'" i" larFc dinavian. and all other to scl
literally. His screaming asso- f"0"1"-"1"- '' the Deutscn ,nce. literature, industry, educa
ciates in the priorities division Jand' to lnr Ln"d ; Hon in a word, to American
immediately contended it would ,ore wc """ ,he -isl war democracy." the bulletin states,
make him nothing more than I ThC educational force, are en-
an office boy for the admirals STEEL RATIONS deavorlng to knit more closely
and generals. I Admiral S. M. Robinson chief : ,lu,n rvrr ,hr strands of Amerl.
Where this strange sentence of the bureau of ship, had told ! n,sm rPr"'n people from
me from lan. m.lhfn ( . ,h- h,,. nvl ff,r. nnaill. i C ''rV P"rl ' 1-' World They
wi-ih to take advantage of the de
votion of those who have an un
usual npprrriatmn of what It
means to be an American since
they came to our shores to es
cape oppression abroad. I)v
came from was something of a the house naval affair, commit
congressional mystery, as the tec steel will have to be rotion
board has had nothing to do ed as strictly as aluminum. This
with Mr. Stettinius before. The is the first official confirmation
sentence was not mentioned m of a disputed prediction ln this ' , .
Some of Mr. column February 28 that steel . ,.. ,. .
iy reversed the customary trail
of getting educated and then go
ing to work.
He quit school 15 years ago to
clerk in a grocery store and la
ter became owner. Thm v- r-
wa turned to school. Next Friday.
32-years-old. will be
awarded his high
loma.
BROTHER LOST
ASTORIA. May 12 uPi
James Madsen. Astoria, said Sat
urday the Canadian govern
ment has informed his parents
school dip-: that his brother. Clinton Mad-
was
the house debate
Cox's friends say he got the would be rationed before July
whole idea from the Baruch re-1 15. The story appeared simul
port on war industries in 1918. taneously with White House
Apparently he took too much ' publication of the Gano Dunn
of the old report, or the legisla-, report stating steel had plenty
tive drafting service did. when i of capacity and its condition
Looking for bargains?
to the Classified page
Turn
'sen. 31. New York ritv
I believed lost In the sinking of
'the vessel Volauire in the At
lantic.
be raised from the runways at y' '""vo? t"-" a'0? defense had failed
SU Monica. C.M.. for the Th.. 1 W. d. .al basis for
iiaa ur.c someurne next week.
Major L instead will be as
signed by O. W. Coyle, outstand
ing civilian Douglas Aircraft rL:. C- .
company test pilot, and Ma "'aig ioys China
Howard C. Bunker cf the Wright Willing To Tackle
field engineering section. ji i
Wright field officials indicat- 3nCKiing or Japan
ed that the bomber, which is' CHfvr.Kivr i , n
. and economic aid. was prepared
It could not be learned by to undertake single-handed the
which route the mammoth bom- task cf putting down Jaoan
ber would travel frcm Califor-l He added it was his nic
nia to Ohio, where it will be ex- tion that -any country in the
ZXS"? t Wright world matching itself against
field, which Major Lmstead American democracy would
calls -the finest experimental meet with certain destruction"
center in the world of aviation." 1 He spoke at a farewell dinner
Major Lmstead is regarded as given by Mme. Chiang for Unit
one of the safest fliers in the ed States Ambassador Nelson T
army. A veteran cf more than 1 Johnson, who is leaving to be
10.000 f.yir.g hours, he has had come minister to Australia
only two miner accidents. Many leading figures in China
The first mishap occurred attended.
early In his 23-year army career I
when his plane crashed because I REAL LIFE
the engine failed. He escaped I HUNTINGTON Ind (.Pi
unhurt as he did a second Umc,Fred,th Langley secrVtarvf
in 1928 when he became a mem- the Huntingin hl Serin-
heTn? iU C'Ub" bY l'ndn- "elLg Je B
iTr J Pfrathu" 'n.h:ghoc4l.che how
.... iiutiii sne iouno a snake under
Cntead lox-es cigars. j -Why. it was Just like you
S., neS n-"y would look down at the floor
hair, medium stature, short mus- im.H.r . j
ache and immaculate dress snake." she said
bLlefII,n, ciar-b- Mis Wilson looked down un-
Tft w 7." .a. d" beT desk and saw . make
a. VtJI,! . "T arTr-T A biol07 tnchtr ought tt
in i28 and was commissioned a I water mocassin two feet long.
That is his familv. H. h.. 1n . "gai basis for such a plea
dauchter. nH . ..v.- " "l T defense then asked
va ilU V I1 13
to b a pilot
minimum
j tion
Ends Today!
J 7"x T0DAY ll
Thrilling Spy-Drami Of Perilous Adventure!
Dared For Patriotism And Lave!
ST FILM ALLlANCr o tmi UNlTiO HATCS I
for a . ij i ininn . . nrrn II I
manslaughter convic UWUlll ULI V Cft II I
TODAY I tf . SPY
umtj&ING JS
- - COMPANION FEATURE
her IkWslTJ Tiia V.IJ l.VI I-l.r.Tv ' .-' tf I
IALL t. "O CrWl
SEWiUC Tnyi W.ll.l.l.lil'.'iiiJIfliV.'lirVffliiJIiifl
stressing the fact that this Is a
time for rertediention to that
great phrase "Irrespective of
race or religion." they seek to
build national unity.
would be satisfactory indefinite
Cartoon
and News
UMTS STFITIIIT DDT UtLM
MSI IIMU UK TURNER LU
TlI MllTlllTjiCali COOPEI T
tew ttart ! - im - l l
H 1:11 t tl . 1:M
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
NEW SUMMER PRICE POLICY
Now No Advance for Vaudeville
Regular Week-Day Prices Prevail
llf K BIG TIME IS
CLIFF ARVIN LoConga Cofe fetite Reue
COOK & KNIGHT Thi end That Song end Ponce
AL ft CONNIE F ANTON Taps end Tumble
RANCHO SERENADERS Song the Weit Lore
NOBLE TRIO "Star of the High Ben"
ON THE SCREEN!
"ROAR OF THE PRESS"
PHt 0 9'J Mywr i
aN0W!
She's the Pamperer
ot tne fampai!
iheijmetiH tfJ
I
MsureenO'Hara V K
Jamei Eihson . aV L
Alberto Vila t0 7
jSsT " if '
10 DouU-HM tonfii. Bed,,',, , t , ,
DOOM OPIN lilt nrf a.aa . u
MOWi AT . flM . IM . m7'TJ
rTunrii ht t ii . . 1
WEDNESDAY!
okm'Urt NartiM'aal
Mlrt.Mr.aja'iMi
SM1 1
WMr Matatatatal I
PINE TREE