Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Herald and News from Klamath Falls, Oregon • Page 4

Publication:
Herald and Newsi
Location:
Klamath Falls, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON september 5, Herald and News FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM Managing Editor EPLEY Editor combination of the Evening Herald and Sunday the Klamath News. Published every afternoon except temporary at Esplanade and Pine streets. Klamath Falls, Publishing Oregon, by the Herald Publishing Co and the a we Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By mail months $3.25 carrier carrier. year $7.50 By mail $6.00 Outside Klamath.

Lake. Modoe Siskiyou counties -year $7.00 Falla, Entered as on August 20. 1906, under act of congress, second class matter at the postoffice of Klamath March 8. 1879 Member Audit Associated Member, Press Bureau Circulation Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY comes the season of straw polls on political trends in advance of the November election. Wearily, we anticipate these periodical reports of how things are supposed to be going, and the slug-fests between political leaders which inevitably follow.

They have already started. Gallup or somebody has been claiming A considerable showing in sentiment for Governor Dewey in the Middle West, New York and This has maddened the democratic, national the committee, "crystal which lambasts ball prognosticator" in its EPLEY weekly clip sheet. Republicans, likewise, will no doubt assail any polls or surveys that show Roosevelt strength. We would like to conduct a little poll among our Herald and News readers to find out how many of them would let themselves be influenced by the results of pre-election straw polls. Political leaders, who get so excited about these polls, must believe that a large part of the American people vote for the man they believe will win, and for that reason only.

That isn't speaking very highly of American citizenship. for this writer, he will do his betting, if any, on the man he thinks will win, but he will do his voting for the man he thinks ought to win. He has a hunch that is the idea held by most people. Opinion of the Town THIS column, which is naturally concerned with the good name of Klamath Falls, has noted repeatedly recently how the actions of a single person, or just a few people, form the basis of individual opinion of a community. If a visitor or a newcomer encounters hospitable, friendly people, he decides Klamath Falls is swell.

If he has the misfortune of running into a few of the other kind- every town has all kinds--he decides its a heck of a place. We happen to sit in a spot where some of these new people come with their stories, and we have been amazed at the contrasting opinions formed by various individuals concerning the community. It is, of course, impossible to hold everybody in line and make them do what is right by these visitors and newcomers. But it is well occasionally to point out that a town's good name has certain very practical values; that those who contribute to that good name are contributing to those values, and those who injure its good name are detracting from them. Wild Life Note UR townsman, Mack Lillard, has decided the wild plum crop Mack took his wife day or two ago.

They the brush on a hillside lake when Mrs. Lillard fright. She had come leg caught in a trap, savagely and bared its The Lillards gave up but decided to try it were again on a hillside they sat down to rest. buzz near Mrs. Lillard quickly to her feet.

There it was, a coiled stick and killed it, and muttering the country wild plums. isn't very good. out wild plumming a were walking through west of Upper Klamath suddenly called out in upon a coyote, its rear which leaped at her fangs. plumming for the day, the next afternoon. They west of town, and There was a peculiar and Mack pulled her rattler.

Mack got a they went home, Mack has more wild life than The democrats, we learn with disappointment, had to give up their scheduled wrestling match at Sunday's picnic. There being no republicans on hand, it seems the demos didn't want to wrestle with each other. FUNERALS JAMES OSCAR HARNEY dames Oscar Harney, a resident of Klamath Falls, Oregon, for the past 15 years, passed away at his late residence, 2111 Darrow, on Saturday, September 2. 1944, at 2 p. m.

The deceased was a native of Pike county, Indiana, and was aged 68 years, 3 months and 25 days when called. Besides his wife Golda V. of this city, he is survived by one son, Jack C. Harney of Portland, one daughter, Mrs. Norah E.

Gandee, Redwood City, one brother, Clee V. Harney, Kinsley, Kansas, and two grandchildren. The remains rest at Ward's Klamath Funeral home, 925 High. where friends may call. The funeral service will take place from Ward's chapel Wednesday.

September 6 at 2 p. m. with the Rev. Eugene V. Haynes of the Community Congregational church officiating.

Commitment services and interment will follow in the family plot Linkville cemetery. Friends are respectfully invited to attend the services. DONNA FAY SHEPPARD Donna Fay Sheppard, the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Sheppard of Tulelake, passed away in this city on Saturday, September 1944.

Little Donna Fay was a native of Klamath Falls and was aged two months when called. Besides her parents, she is survived by two brothers, Jasper and Freddie of Tulelake: three sisters. Betty, Virgie and Dorothy, all of Tulelake, her paternal grandmother. Mrs. Maybelle Dickard of Richmond.

and her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Backus of Roswell.

N. M. The funeral service was held ville cemetery on Tuesday, September 5 at 1 p. m. Commitment services and interment followed in the baby row.

Ward's Klamath Funeral home in charge. Courthouse Records News Behind the News Sept. 5-The sensational, WASHING TONS (188 to 54) repudiation of all pressure advice by the house upon the postwar unemployment relief problem, drew scant public attention naturally, in view of what is going on in Europe. Only lean, unsearching press reports recounted the rejection not only CIO $35 A week idea, but of the senate compromise and Baruch As well, and indeed, the whole whooped-up notion of the necessity of federal relief and this in the face of an minent election. The house MALLON action said flatly: "There is six billion dollars in the state unemployment insurance funds, and this should be enough to care for the situation--if not, the next congress can handle it in January." The feat was made possible because democratic house ways and means Chairman Doughton was angry, very angry.

He was angry first at the senate because it had passed the George bill, whereas all taxation legislation should be conceived by his committee. He could hardly see anything good in the senate bill, and his attitude permeated the whole house with a desire to put the senate in its place. Anonymous Votes By PAUL MALLON THIS was anonymous) all done so by the teller action votes cannot be (individually held against any individual congressman in the election; also congressmen may change their minds without individual identification when the compromise between the Doughton and George bills finally comes from the present conference by the two houses. But with these reservations, the house democratic leadership turned its back on its vice presidential candidate, Senator Truman, who promoted the CIO $35 a week bill (it had no word from Mr. Roosevelt who persistently and coyly remained out of the argument despite CIO efforts to get him to speak.) These congressmen are mostly from small towns, the vastly sprinkled middle class communities of the country.

The portion of their northern and Pacific city brethren, who opposed them, number no more than 54 on any vote, which shows why CIO will never be popular politically in this country, or its associated communism. The CIO'ers are really only a minority in their own labor union minority. The CIO, of course, failed everywhere with its proposition, in the senate as well as the house, because everyone could see it was just a plain greedy grab. There was never a better simile for its failure than that of the dog that saw a bone as large as he in the water, but upon his own submersion in a leap for it, found it was only his own shadow. For instance, Montana's democratic Senator Murray originally had joined in with Senator George in this conversion matter, proposing a maximum $25 a week unemployment allowance for the highly paid war workers.

They could have got that then. Labor Attacks Murray BUT Murray, organized although labor he began had an always attack been on a strong labor man. (Incidentally, AFL backed the CIO in this matter, even though not conspicuously.) The peculiar newspaper PM sharply denounced Murray. So he turned around and joined in the Murray-Kilgore bill, setting up the unemployment rate to $35. This shocked both the country and congress, because it was $10 a week more than would be allowed soldiers.

In various other bills the CIO congressmen tried to get away from their original mistake and give the veterans the same or a little more than their own war workers, but no one can remember anything but that $35 original proposal, which might have established that figure as a national minimum wage, because few workers who could remain idle two years for that amount, would care to work for less. (The workers will now get about $18 a week maximum average in the state unemployment insurance laws for much less than two years.) Even the war workers themselves laughed at the CIO proposition. For some years they generally have been making more money than ever in their lives, and they could not possibly spend it all, because of rationing and the shortage of goods. Also they have been buying bonds which now may be cashed at any bank. Yet even the George bill passed by the senate proposes to give them up to $200 each for railroad fare back home in addition to their state compensation of $6,000,000,000 as needed.

EARN AWARD PORTLAND, Sept. 2 (AP)-The Rogers Canning company's Milton and Athena plants have earned the war food administration's award for outstanding achievement in food processing. The WFA office here said formal presentation will be made soon. China produces 561,160 hockey sticks annually in normal times. FEEL SOOTHE OH lows what when joyful soothing relief usually Resinol- folthe famous ointment of four generations-is used on sunburned or chafed skin, ivy poisoning, simple rash, dry eczema or cracked toes.

Specially medicated to, soothe itching and burning, and so aid healing. Keep a jar handy--it pays. RESINOL PILES. SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION No Loss of Time Permanent Results! DR. E.

M. MARSHA Chiropractio Physician 220 No. 7th Esquire Theatre BidE Phone 7066 TRUCKS FOR RENT You Drive Move Yourself Save and Short Trips STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 East Main SIDE GLANCES COPR. 194 SY NEA SERVICE. INC.

T. M. REG. U. A.

PAT. OFF. "You're sending me to bed without supper so you can have a bigger piece of cake- -but don't forget your digestion is on the blink!" Market Quotations NEW YORK. Sept. The European victory sweep continued cautionary stock market influence today In addition to touching off further weakness of commodities.

Closing quotations: American Can Car Fdy Am Tel Tel Anaconda Calif Packing Cat Tractor 484 Commonwealth Sou Curtis- Wright General Electric 381. General Moters Gt Nor Ry pfd 381 Illinois Central 161 Int Harvester 80 Kennecott 32 Lockheed Long -Bell Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelv Central Northern Pacific Pac Gas El 33 Packard Motor Penna 20 Republic Steel 19 Richfield Oil Safeway Stores 52 Sears Roebuck 96 Southern Pacific Standard Brands 30 Sunshine Mining Trans -America 913 Union Oil Calif Union Pacific 1061 Steel Warner Pictures 1218 Potatoes CHICAGO, Sept. 5 (AP-WFA)-Potatoes. arrivals 253: on track 372; total U. S.

shipments: Saturday. 614; Sundas. 67; Monday, 209; supplies liberal, western stocks, demand good. market firm at ceiling for best quality, northern stocks: demand slow: Wisconsin washed Triumphs, slightly weaker; for best for others, market about steady quality; Idaho Russet Burbanks, U. S.

No. 1, Colorado Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. 1, Nebraska Red Warblers U.

S. No. 1, $3.51: North Dakota Bliss Triumphs U. S. No.

1. $2.70: Commercials Cobbler Commercials $2.65: Wisconsin Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. S.

1, Katahdins and Cobblers U. No. 1, LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. 'Sept. 5 A steers Active, fully steady.

Fed quoted mostly northern grassers load good 970 lb. $12.75, good feeders two cars medium to good grass heifers 11.75: about eight loads good range cows common cutters medium sausage bulls Calves 400. Fully steady; about five good 350-400 lb. slaughter calves Hogs: 300. Steady: around two loads good to choice 180-240 lb.

barrows and gilts $15.75, few medium sows $13.25. Sheep: 5200. Undertone steady: about 2400 north or coast, 1500 Oregon lambs. 2000 valley shorn lambs. Choice quoted medium to good 12.50; shorn ewes CHICAGO, Sept.

5 (AP. able hogs, total 20,000: active, fully steady: complete clearance early; good' and choice 150-240 lbs. $14.75: weights over 240 Ibs. and good and choice cows $14.00: few medium to choice 120-140 lbs. Salable cattle 20.000; total salable calves 1500: total calves 2000: at steers and yearlings steady to 25 cents lower; medium and grade choice showed offerings decline, steady; all strictly top $18.35 on medium weights; best yearlings common and medium grades good grade wintered Montanas to killer $15.50: heifers fully steady, choice offerings to $17.65 and VOTE FOR C.

J. SHORB FOR CONGRESS Montana grasses rood grade Cows steady at all others weak to shade lower: cutters $7.75 down; bulls steady to 25 cents lower. light grass bulls at showing most decline: vealers unchanged, mostly $15.00 down: stocker and feeder cattle fairly active and firm. with good and choice western yearlings up $13.50. Salable sheep 4000; total 12.300; spring Jamba slow.

carly bid 25 cents to mostly 50 cents lower, holding good and choice native spring lambs above $14.50: four loads medium to mostly good Montanas held above $14.00: shorn ewes steady. short deck largely good and choice Montana ewes with No. 1 pelt $5.60: eull to good shorn native ewes according to grade. PORTLAND. Sept.

Cattle salable 2700. total 2850. Calves salable and total 300; market slow. erally steady to 25 cents lower. but liberal share nearly all classes unsold: cows particularly draggy: bulk commonmedium grass steers two loads one load good grassers up to $15.25: common-medium heifers 11.65: common and cutter cows 5.50: fat dairy type cows to $0.00: com mon -medium beet cows few good cows medium- good bulls cutters down to good -choice light vealers few heavy calves slow.

mostly $13.00 down. HOES salable 3200. total 2850: market active -steady: good -choice 170-240 1b. $13.75: 241-270 15. $15.00: largely light lights feeder good sows few pigs $13.00.

Sheep salabie 1800. total 3100: lower: market slow. weak to 25 cents choice truck- in spring lambs largely $11.50: one load good range lambs $11.75: few lots strictly rood -choice rangers up to $12.50: medium- good shorn lambs $9.50: few common-medium shorn lambs on feeder account culls down to $5.00: yearlings good ewes culls down to $1.00. WHEAT CHICAGO, Sept. 5 (AP)-The swift advance through the lowlands and Prance caused commission house tion today and practically all grain futures dipped to new seasonal lows.

There were rallies at times, largely on short-covering. but the market showed little real recovery power. Wheat losses reached more than a cent at times, and rye and barley more than 2 cents. An incorrect rumor that Germany had capitulated was scotched before the mar. ket opened, but much uncertainty mained due to the favorable war news.

Additional bearish factors wore K00d corn crop prospects, favorable wheat plowing and seeding, weather, and other reduction In the equalization fee on export of Canadian oats. which are giving the domestic product considerable competition. Wheat closed to lower than the previous finish, September oats were off to September rye was to down. September and barley was to lower. September OBITUARIES VINKO MATIN Vinko Matin.

resident of Klamath county for the past 19 years, passed away in this city on Sunday morning. September 3, 1944. The deccased was a native of Zagreth. Yugoslavia, and was aged 56 years, 6 months and 19 days when called, The remains rest at Ward's Klamath Funeral 025 High. Notice of funeral arrangements will be announced later.

ROBERT ELLSWORTH HARTLEY Robert Ellsworth Hartley, for the last 15 years a resident of Klamath county, Oregon passed away in this city Monday, September 4. 1944 at 1 a. m. following a brief illness. He was a native of Utah and at the time of his death was aged 68 years 8 months and 6 days.

The remains rest in the Earl Whitlock Fuhome. Pine at Sixth. Notice of funeral -to be announced at a later date. Wonderful for Skin and Scalp Irritations Effective Home Treatment Promptly Relieves Torture! To quickly soothe the itching, burning of eczema, psoriasis, skin and scalp ritations due to external cause -apply odorless liquid -a Doctor's mula backed by 35 years' success. Zemo ALSO aids healing.

Being stainless, invisible- you can apply Zemo anytime it won't show on skin. Over 25,000,000 packages sold! All drugstores. In 3 sizes. ZEMO vide 1000 0 NEW kind of ASPIRIN tablet doesn't upset stomach you need quick relief from not irritate or upset stomach -even pain, do you hesitate to take aspirin after repeated doses. because it leaves you with an upset Tear this out to remind you to get stomach? If so, this new medical dis- Superia today, so you can have it on covery, SUPERIN, is "just what the hand when headaches, colds, strike.

doctor ordered" for you. See how quickly it Superin is aspirin plus--contains the relieves pain -how same pure, safe aspirin you have long fine you 0004 feel after take known -but developed by doctors in a ing. At your druggist's, special way for those upset by aspirin 154 and in its ordinary form. at the job of relieving pain, reduces the This new kind of aspirin tablet dissolves more quickly, lets the aspirin get right Superin acidity of ordinary aspirin, and does TABLETS Telling The Editor Letters printed here must not be more than 500 words in length. must be write ten legibly on ONE SIDE of the paper only, and must ba signed.

warmly Contributiona wel. following these rules, are comed. the Editor) Twenty-five years Oregon started this nation ago, upon one of the greatest structive programs in tory by merely placing a small tax upon each gallon of gasoline used for transportation purposes, and immediately using that revenue for one specific to build and maintain purpose: better highways. This program has now revolutionized our tire highway system. This fall, the clear thinking voters of Oregon are going to start another tax, program that will eventually revolutionize our entire economic system, Just as completely and successfully, AS the gasoline tax has done our highway system.

Now, money is the gasoline that we use to keep our economic engine running. Oregon's Employment and Retirement Mutual Insurance Plan will merely place a small tax upon the dollars used--with certain exemptons--in our economic engine. The revenue therefrom will again be immediately used each month for another specific purpose: to build and maintain permanent highway of buying power among our physically unemployable citizens over 18 and those who wish to retire at 60. By adopting this scientific insurance program on November 7, Oregon will again lead America-this time out of the economic "mud" of the past--into stabilized economic security of the future. MAUDE P.

LEWIS, 3306 Lake Road, Portland 2, Mil. Oregon. ON BALLOT MEASURE KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To The Road to Berlin By The Associated Press 1-Russian front: 322 miles (from eastern suburbs of War. saw.) 2-Western front: 362 miles (from Breda.) 3-Southern France: 560 miles (from Bourg-en-Bresse.) 4-Italian front: 585 miles (from south of Rimini.) JAPANESE-AMERICAN DRAFT VALE, Sept.

2 (P)--The draft called 46 men in Malheur county. All but nine were JapaneseAmericans. Klamath's Yesterdays From the files 40 years 999 and 10 years 899. From the Klamath News Sept. 5, 1934 One hundred two farmers at meeting at Henley last night organized the Klamath Grange Supply, A buying co-operative, with Ed Geary as president.

Wallace Burns of Chiloquin and an unidentified hitchhiker were killed 'Crescent automobile accident near last night. Perry Ivory of Alturas won Lakeview riding content From The Day roundups Hunting August 1904 Klamath. antelope regulations are male out July and 15 mountain Female deer, August, November son. take more than five is allowed No at season January 1: from September Ducks, geese, 15 night per week or 50. in one ducks, day, Monday, Monday, September 4.

Klamath Falls 04 1 North Mend Portland Steno San Francisco Seattle Classified Ads Bring ReruN TOMORROW NIGHT AL DONAHUE AND HIS Orchestra ARMORY FEATURING-Vocalists Lovely LYNNE STEVENS DICK VANCE And the RHYTHMAIRES Admission prices, including tax. Gentlemen Ladies $1.00 Servicemen $1.00 Dancing 9 'til 1 Doors Open 8:30 Marriages DEUEL-MILLER. Luther Jones Deuel, 47, accountant, native and resident of Medford. Ore. Beatrice L.

saleslady, native and resident Medford, Ore. Justice Court Lawrence Jackson, reckless driving. Fined $25. Othie Keith McDermott. No license on trailer.

Fined $5.50. John Lubetich. Operating truck of celse sticker. Fined $5.50. $5.50.

excessive Robert width Aberham a on highway. Fined Armstrong. No 11- VITAL STATISTICS O'CONNELL -Born at Hillside hospital, Klamath Falls, on September 3, 1944. to Mr. Mi and Mrs.

John O'Connell, Tulelake, boy, Weight: 8 pounds ounces. GOSSETT- Born at Klamath Valley hospital, Klamath Falls, on September 3, 1944, to Mr. and Mrs. W. A.

Gossett, 2850 Bisbee, a boy. Weight: 8 pounds ounces. PINELLI-Born at Klamath Valley hospital, Klamath Falls, on September 3. 1944, to Mr. and Mrs.

S. Pinelli. Pelican City, a boy. Weight: 6 pounds ounces. Scotland's population totaled 4,483,000 in 1931.

A Gem of Thought From Idella'sThere was a Fat Lady named Tweet Who thus her husband did greetThe Bus trip home was not bad. Cause three nice men and a lad Got up and gave me their seat. Rat Tail Combs 10c Phone 8466 AT IDELLA'S 4846 S. 6th -What a If you shudder a little when you see this wonder how long before engine trouble may catch up with put in RPM why not drive in to see MOTOR OIL, your RPM" Service Man which minimizes and have varnish and and protects the so that you can ride in peace, wear-spots other knowing that there's no finer oils leave oil at any price. BETTER TAKES YOUR MOTOR CARE STANDARD OF 14 US CALIFORNIA.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Herald and News Archive

Pages Available:
123,523
Years Available:
1942-1964