May 81, 1048 PAGS FIV1 Correction In the church pugo f thin newspaper on Krl clny, May 2H, It Willi ntlilod Ihut Mm. C'liui'lcH K. Hoy would Kpi'tik ut u women's meeting hold In St. Paul's Kplscopul church on Tuusituy uftornooii unci ugnln nt tho Motiiodlut church on Tues iliiy evening. Tim article should Imvo raid Hint Mm, Hoys would Kpciik nt St. Pnul'a church nt 2 o'clock on Tuesday afternoon, but ut tho Mothodlst church at nn open mooting nt 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, Burglary Thnru was mi at tempted buruliii'y nt Casey's pool hull In Muri'lll hint J'rltlny night ut about 11:40 o'clock. Prowlera cut ii screen from a buck window nnd Hilcrrd the building, but woro frightened away before tlu-y were abla to luko anything. Graduates Lieutenant Glenn A. Stover, formorly of Klumuth Knlls und Morrill, linn graduated from Ellington Field In Texua. Llculenuiil Stover win an em ployee of tho first National bunk, both In Merrill and Klam ath I'n 1 l. Have Bon Mr. and Mra. Dar roll Miller, 710 Alamuda street, are tho parents of a boy, born Sunday at Hillside hoapitul. This In their second child. Miller Is employed at tho Dick B, Miller Kin-Hue, Promottd Adolph Zamiky. Jr., son of Mrs. Charles Clzek of 7:i0 N. Ninth street and former city accountant here has been promoted to lieutenant 0. g.) i the navy. Pollca Court On police rec ords today there appeared six drunks, one vag, and one dis orderly conduct. Falsa AlarmThe fire depart ment was called to Ninth and Lincoln at. 11:25 a. m. yesterday on a false alarm call, Home Bessie Knight, daugh ter of Mra. Lou Larson of 618 Willow street, returned home from McCloud, California, where she graduated last week from high school, OBITUARY LORETTA ELIZABETH BARR Lorcttn Elisabeth Borr for tho last twenty-four yenrs a resldont of Klnmnth Knlls, Ore., passed uwny In this city on Saturday, May 20, 10i:i at 0:3(1 p. m. fol lowing nn illness of one week. She wits a native of Yrcka, Calif., nnd at the time of her death was aged 42 years, S months and 20 ilnys. Surviving arc: her hus band, Clnreuce It. Burr of this city; one daughter, Mrs. Robert Crusen of Tulare, Cnllf.j one son, Clarence Robert Burr of this city; her mother, Mra. John Rhotcn of Klnmnth Falls; a brother, Carl Rhoton of Mcdford, Ore.; and ono slstor, Mrs. Luella Stafford of Klnmnth Falls. Mrs. Barr was n member of Sierra Star Chapter No. 120, OES of Sierra vlllc, Cnllf. Tho remains rest in tho Enrl Whltlock Funeral Home, Pine street at Sixth, whero friends may call after 12 noon Tuesday. Notico of fu neral to bo announced In tho next Issue of this paper. Questioned r v .j INKA Ttlephoto) Paul Doglcy, above, husband or slain 117-year-old Mrs. oharleen Oegloy, Is shuwn In Los Angeles us ha was uuestlonod by police, The nuuo and BoaUm body 01 Mrs. Degley, an ex pectant mother, ws discovered In a lovers' lane near Los Angeles, LUMBER PRODUCTION NEARLY SUFFICIENT WASHINGTON, May 31 IP) First quarter lumber production In this country was at a rate nearly sufficient to meet esti mated military and essential ci vilian requirements, the war pro duction board reported today. It estimated first quarter pro duction at 7,141,100,000 board feet, Requirements for the year are estimated at 32,000,000,000 board feet. WASHINGTON, May 31 VP) War production is "under the increasing handicap of conflict ing governmental objectives, scattered governmental author ity and divided governmental responsibility," the lumber sur vey committee asserted yester day in reporting that mill stocks have reached a new low. SAN MATEO, Calif,, VP) Leland Stanford Eckert tojd po lice that uninvited guests broke into his home while the family was away, set the table for five, '"'-ed, took a shower and depart- MAIL CLOSING TIME (Effective Fab. IS, 1943) Train 19 Southbound) 6 p. m. Train 20 Northboundi 11 a. m. Train 17 Southbound! 7 a, m. Train 16 Northboundi 10 p. m. Mediord Stage, Westbound, 3i30 p. m., Evening Airmail. Stages to Aituras, Ashland, Lake view and Rocky Point 7 a. as. FUNERAL FREDERICK T. MacDONALD Tho funeral acrvlce for tho Into Frederick T. MncDonald, who passed awny in this city on May 27, wilt take place from the chapel of Wards Klnmnth Fu neral homo, 029 High street on Wednesday ' afternoon at 2 o'clock. Tho Rev. F. C. Wlsscn bnch will officiate. The Klnmnth Falls Post No. 8, Amorlcnn Le gion, will conduct military bur ial rltea In tho Llnkvlllo cemo tery, Friends nro Invited to at tend tho services, An onion Is formed from the plant's stem, Suburban League Auxlllary-r The Suburban League auxiliary will hold their regular pinochle card porly In the banquet room of the KC hall on Tuesday alter noon, June 1, at 2 o'clock. The public is invited. Earthquake Upsets Southwest Germany LONDON, May, 31 (P) Many homes wore destroyed by fire from upset stoves and factories were damaged by fnlllng smoke stacks In southwestern Germany In a series of earthquakes that shook the area May 28, DNB said In a Berlin broadcast today. The German news agency broadcast, recorded by The AS' soclutcd Press, said that In some areas of tho Swabian Alps the earthquake was worse than the one which caused widespread damage In 1011. Flagg Becomes PUC Chief Tuesday SALEM, May 31 VP) Georgo H. Flagg, deputy secretary of stnto for nine ycors, will become stato public utilities commission. cr tomorrow, replacing Ormond R. Bonn. Governor Earl Snoll appointed Flagg to succeed Bean, who hns served lour years. Max Flanncry, head of the drivers' llconso division in the stnto department, will succeed Franklin Davis as assistant pub lie utilities commissioner. Lee Jacobs Gives Lake view Address Lee Jacobs of Klamath Falls gnvo the Memorial Day address at Lnkovlcw Sunday, Tho scry. ices were hold in the Marlus thentro and were well attended by people of Lnkcvlow and the nearby area. Jacobs is food rationing spec lallst of the district office of OPA. Rhode Island hns had nn auto, mobile drivers' llconso lnw long er than any other state of the Union. 'Ikrr- vf! A, -', ; aw ft 1 a . 1 : v. A 7 rv. vp HITTING THE DIR T Pvt. Jess Finler of McLean. Tex., Ukes a dive from his bronco dur Ing the rodeo stared by service men t Camp Roberts, Calif., to entertain the post. SALEM. May 31 IP) Police watched the condition todoy of R. E. Shields, Mchama mill work. er, wounded Saturday as two escaped state prison convicts at tempted to elude captors. Hospital attendants said Shields, shot in the abdomen, was resting well. District Attorney Miller Hay' den said ono of the convicts, Mcrlyn G. Kenslcr, shot Shields when the latter refused to let them in his house, and that first degree murder charges would be filed against both Kensler and Doyle C. McCann, the other es capee, If Shields dies. Haydcn said the two also face prosecution under the habitual criminal law. Meanwhile police continued a When in Mtdford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Joe and Anne Earley Proprietors search for George W. Durham, 33, who escaped at the same time ai the others. IT BACK-FIRE CAMP ABBOT, Ore., (IP) Said the sergeant to the WAAC, "take it easy. These motorcycles are tricky." WAAC Auxiliary Agnes M. Sonnenfelt, of Eau Claire, Wis., hopped aboard, gave Sgt. Bill Anthony a snappy exhibition of motorcycle maneuvering. Later she explained that she had been a cycle expert for eight years and once made a 7,000 mile solo tour of the U. S. Would the sergeant like to see her clip pings? "Nuts," said Sgt. Anthony. It will be inevitable thla year to give more weight to what the registrant is doing than to the relationship he has with de pendents. Draft Director Lew is B. Hershey. P f L E S SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALISATION N Ltm l Tim . . Ptrmaiwit Rxultil DR, E. M. MARSHA Ohlrtprtatlc Phytltlan M HI. II - Uilra ThMlrs 1 14. nmr llll POPOVER Actress Penny Singleton models her new "pop. over" dress for housework a wrap-around of sturdy blue denim with a big allied pocket for ai earry-all and a pot-holder mitt which han frnm ih hH. (ssaaeiiMAfiiv str.eae iimid TMsihU...CM4wfaittt, s ipeclei of ttrtmlmfirt m.Ii senulljr iht liu of s ipeck of duit. Originally iti nny Owntr lived en the bottom of in mcitnt i in the San Joaquin Valley. Bui when we found it, 35 or 40 million fun later, Itwti buried two miles underground. TT h l, '.4 : U'm v i 3v I; I 'i -'vv 1 - :" - 1 t cost us A46.10 to look ctt litis (Uihicitles umevicumts ! 1. On M.rth I, If 41 1 Union Oil crew in tht SanJoaquinValley began drillingKemeoM-J. Four months later, when they abandoned the hole without rinding oil, they had reached s depth of 11,396 fett and apent JI4WI0. All they had to show for their efforts wn t number of shells like the one above, 2. If Unlen Oil had btn a one-man company, Kernco 31-J might have finished ui. But be cause the company is owned by 31,632 peo ple, the average loss to each owner was only $4.63. It is this capacity to distribute losses, at well as profits, tmng hi tf fnflt that hat made America's oil development possible. 3. 'or finding and producing oil is no penny antegame. Out of 169exploratory wells drilled by the industry in California last year, only pmtJ n) mftrtarm They didn't all cost $146,000, of course, and the 3 good ones paid for s lot of dry holes. At lut tf you're going to stay in the oil busi ness, you have to be big enough to absorb tht losses with the gains. It is true that scientific methods, developed by the oil companies, have taken half the gamble out of finding oiL S, Far II yeara, Union Oil Paleontologists have been studying shells, like the one above, taken from thousands of wells. By combining this dita with core analysis and geophysical findings, we can plot the underground forma, (ions where oil nwtf occur. 6 But unfortunately, oil ttotin'i occur where itftwievcn 1 time in 10. So we still get plenty of dry holes. Yet in spite of these odds, the American oil companies have discovered more oil than the rest of the world combined. Why? Because they were big enough to do the job. 7, Big snough to spend thousands of dollars mrj mnib, as Union does, just looking for promising formations. Big enough to drill several dry wildcats trny yur without going broke. Individual Americans, operating on their own, could never have done this. 8, But groups of Americans, pooling their money in corporations, could. In this principle of multiple ewrtmbip you have the secret of America's amazing industrial progress. With out it our standard of peace-time living, km uvr-limt pnJucthn, could nevet have been Tht company that hteamt Union Oil kos founded in 1SS6 out of tin per sonal savings of nine Santa Paula, California business men. Today, it is owned hy 31,652 people, most of whom livt right ken in the Wtsl-3.6Z8inSanFrancitco,434in Seattle, 7 in Grants Pass, Oregon, 274 in San Diego, etc ThtCompaHy's profits which, M942, amounted to 3.8 on capital invested, art shared among these people. Last year this net profit amounted At SI 74.94 ptr stockholder. Of this sum, $147.42 was paid out in dividends" $27.52 was left in the business. In return for these profits, Ike 31. 552 owners have financed tht lank ships, oil wells, refineries and service stations thatmakeUnion'soperationspossible. This is the story of most American corporations. By pooling Iht money and talents of a lot of People, we art ablt to do a job collectively that we could never do alone. ' " . , 1? i"' CAM, IIOSIIl' AM I RICA'S MTTH fkllDOM IS FRJI INTIRPRISI This series, sponsored by the people ef Union Oil Company, is dedicated to s discussion of Ativand (eAyAmericinbusi ncss functions. We hope you'll feel free ro send In any suggestions or criticisms you have to offer. Write: The President, UnionOil Compiny.UnionOil Building, Los Angeles, California,