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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1944)
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE FOUR FANK JKNUNi MALCOLM EPLEY ' KUlr . Managing Editor A taraorr combination of the Evening Herald atwl Otm Kurnath New. Published evei afternoon except Itundar at Eselanad and Plna streets. Klamath Falls. Oreion. Ay tha Harald Publuhln Co. and the News Publishing Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: , month 75c By mall .year 7.ou ay mail .6 month! tS.39 year waw Duuldo Klamath. Lake. Modoc SlaMyou coun'l'ea jear ?00 Entered as second eleea matter at tha poatofflea ol Klamath iijiOre. oa .August 30. 1008. under aot ol congress, lane. -- March S. 1ST9 Member. Aeeocleted Pree Membar Audit Bureau Circulation i Guest Editorial Br JOE KICKS Chairman. 5th War Loan Drive pHE tremendous task of financing a war, such I as the one we are now fighting, is a ta-k that the average Individual can hardly compre hend, however a task that to date has been successfully pro-frS moted unaerar , tne aoie airec-R; . . Gamble, nation al Director of War Finance. (Ted is an Ore gonian of whom we should all be proud.) Many plans could bave been used in the financing of this war, drafting of labor, minimum wages, control t of all goods by. the government. n--jw ft triors?' just as drastic 5.-1- or even more so, but our gov ernment, being a demo cracy, chose a real democratic plan for the financ ing of the war. JOE HICKS This method includes general taxation, as order ed by our legislative bodies, and then making up the difference by borrowing money from our citizens on a voluntary plan through "WAR BOND SALES." During the year of 1944, the one hundred billion dollars that will be spent in the war effort and in the support of our government must be largely raised through the sale of War Bonds. Should this method fail, the govern ment has no alternative but to use a more dras tic means .of obtaining the funds necessary to carry on this tremendous war.' These means could be greatly increased taxes, or the issuing of currency not properly backed by gold or other sound credits. This latter method would, of course, drastically increase our inflationary trend. It would make the dollars we have not spent for Bonds worth less to us as individuals, so' from strictly a selfish standpoint, we should consider our bond dollars as double-duty . dol lars; protection against the value ol our dollar today,, and a dollar to spend after the war is won. Each of us should conserve our spending that we may have more money to buy more War Bonds. . Three Groups ...... IN DIVIDING our American citizens into bond- . buying classifications, there are three definite groups. Group number one, the group that all of us can well be proud of, buy bonds with a vengeance. They forego many of their accus tomed luxuries and pleasures so that they will have more money to loan to their government. They spend their vacation working in their Victory Garden, or even working at their de fense job, or otherwise economically so that any vacation money could be used to purchase War Bonds. They half sole their shoes, wear their clothes generally longer, buy foods that are conservative and economical, and use that money saved for the purchase of War Bonds. ; Group number two represents our average citizen.. This citizen is making more money than ever before, either because he is paid higher wages, or he is working longer hours. Because of war circumstances, he is not making pay ' ments on a car, radio, or other expensive equip ment; but he lives, if anything, just a little bet ter than in pre-war times. He buys a few more and higher grade of groceries. He goes to the show more often. He has more clothes to wear and his general living conditions are higher than before. This citizen buys bonds with the taoney he has left. He is a good average citizen, but he can't seem to realize that he should be mak ing a sacrifice to support the war effort rather than just put his savings into the war effort. He forgets that our democratic way of life is predicated on equal sacrifices by all he forgets the sacrifices our servicemen are making so gallantly. Group number three, though it is a minority group, is made up of the citizens who can offer thousands of varied excuses for not buying bonds. He is quite capable of manufacturing excuses to meet every occasion and every ap proach. He quite often says that the govern ment is wasteful; that if the government plan ned economically, they wouldn't need to sell War Bonds. He often states that he can't afford to buy War Bonds, though he may be making more money than ever before and that in real ity he can't afford not to buy War Bonds. He quite often states that he is doing his duty because he is working in the war effort, or because he has relatives fighting in the war effort, or the many other reasons that he can readily think of. This class of citizen is prob ably living in a higher plane than ever before. He is the one who has kept alive the "black markets.". He has money to spend and finds many ways to spend it. He overlooks any real individual financial responsibility in this tre mendous war effort and convinces himself that the Job will be done and that he doesn't neces sarily have to make any sacrifice to see that it is done. Some of this group are, of course, pro-Nazi; some are just plain nearsighted and selfish;? others Just haven't given any real thought to their obligation to their country, a personal and real obligation to their democracy. Duty to Country IN planning our effort for the Sth War Loan drive,' we must consider these three groups of citizens. To group number one we must take off our hats and know that but for them the war abroad or at home might easily be lost; that , but for them many fighting men, after giving their all, might return to their home land to find it in financial ruin, to find starva tion and rtoting existing, a condition of utter ehaos prevalent. Group number 2, our average citizen, must, by some means, be made to understand and appreciate that his duty is not quite being performed. He must know mat his obligation to those fighting our wars is to sacri fice in some small way his standard of living. Many of these in group number two must be transferred to group numoer one. inoy musi , be made to feel the pride of being a part, heart and soul, in the earning of their freedom. Group three, the slacker of our citizens, must defi nitely, to all intents and purposes, be elimin ated. Other than the pro-Nazi or pro-Japanese, it should be possible to do this. In our Sth War Loan drive, we must bring to them, by any means at hand, the understanding of their duty to their country. We must show them that each individual must participate, not just those ' who choose. We must, through the medium of advertising, radio, newspaper publicity, indi vidual personal contacts, bring to these people an understanding of their burden of responsi bility to their country. If we can partially complete this task during the 5th War Loan drive, the spirit of democracy will have again proven its value. Let's Back The Attack Buy More Than Before! AO Advertising Roundup Br A. D. ADDISON MONDAY Or is it Saturday? Loafed yes terday, and will again tomorrow. We get out a paper Memorial Day, but business houses will be closed, so ad. have to", - vi?.vr be wound up to-; day for Tuesday ! : and Wednesday. Why couldn't Franklin put all :. holidays on Monday instead of just pushing Thank sgiving around? Business i s brisk around town. Monday is next best day to Saturday, and the days before and after a holiday are ex tra good . . . but not good enough to make up for a day lost . . Walter Winchell Jacobs A newspaper always goes way down into the red on a holiday, and with the paper sup ply what it is, the inclination is to skip a day and save a ton. But the news is "hot" these days, and subscribers will get their papers. a a a , TUESDAY Wound up the day with a rosy forehead, a broken back, and a small amount of gardening done. And without the ambition or gas to drive down and get a paper. That's the .trouble with being a deadhead and packing your own paper home. You can't hol ier if it isn't at hand. - "Farmers Need the Moisture" ' WEDNESDAY Somehow the weatherman got mixed up. It rained to usher in Memorial Day and to usher It out, but missed the day entirely. The tradition is shattered! This is about the only time of year that a rain is welcomed in Klamath. In the good old days when we dug tooth and nail to get lots of advertising for big Thursday and Fri day papers, it always chose Wednesday for a good wet rain. Always Wednesday! And half the extra ads you'd counted on for the next day were postponed a week. Snow, now, is something else. In the fall ' of the year especially, housewives to grand fathers, who normally spend day after day without so much as sticking their noses out doors, will invent the flimsiest excuses to muck around downtown hours on end in a biting snow storm. The same people wouldn't venture next door to borrow a cup of flour in a nice mild, warm rain. There is something depressing about a nice mild rain, and a nice overcast sky. I hate it! Four Eras of Advertising THURSDAY In the course of reading about the retirement of Raymond Rublcam, found er and head of the 21-year-old top-notch adver tising agency, Young & Rubicam, came upon . his summary of the ' four eras of advertising. '"1. In the earliest days the most important factor was the mere fact that you did advertise, because most of your competitors didn't ad vertise.' - "2. As more companies were attracted to ad vertising, competition expressed itself in size of space and frequency , of appearance. "3. Limitations of space brought greater env phasis on skill. Copy and art became the important factors. "4. Then came research. Formerly, the copy and art men went pretty much according to their own taste and hunches. Today, the suc cessful advertiser must know." There's food for thought there. Rublcam says the. "successful advertiser must know" meaning, must know his product and must . know his customers. And right there is the kernel of the nut that Rubicam's advertiser (his agency accepts no accounts of less than $200,000) has to break to get on even terms with the average Main street plug. The average up and coming local advertiser has it over the national ad vertiser like a tent because he ALREADY KNOWS what the big advertising agency has to find out by lengthy and expensive research. I've watched Fred Hoagland blue-pencil some of my best efforts, on a "hunch," because he instinctively knew that the particular phrase didn't truly represent Fluhrer's, or that it didn't strike the right note with his Klamath custom ers. And he didn't have to employ Dr. George Gallup (vice-president in charge of research for Young & Rubicam) to conduct a consumer sur vey to know he was right. ' SIDE GLANCES Jacobs Lays It On! FRIDAY Got raked over the coals by an expert!" A letter from a former Klamath citizen, Lee Jacobs, now manager of radio KBKR in Baker, starts thus: . . "Dear Eleanor Addison: "I wish I had time to answer a statement or two made in your column 'My Day' appearing in The Herald and News of last Saturday. "While I disagree with quite a bit of it I refer particularly to 'My Day" headed Tuesday when you must have lost your favorite pipe or your Model T got you off to a bad start." Lee referred to ' my quotes from a survey (made for advertisers, not newspapers) which showed that most, people dislike radio com mercials and welcome newspaper- advbrlising, core-14 wt lata arwtd. mo. t. la. atei a. net. Off. ' "It's only a dream yet the end of the war, George com ing home, and no more tax on rouge and lipstick I" SPECIALTY BUYING Potatoes I rriTiinrn ninirT ,;, , rtA URtu IVTOtll NEW YORK. Jun 3 OPh Socclallicd buying, principally In liquor, low- pneed motor ana aelcctau rails, nolpod ihe dock market keep 11a balance ialrly well today. Investment demand, baaed on the earnings ouUook and Individual situa tions, continued to serve as trie main bullish trend prop. near tne close many ravontes were up (ractlona to bettor than a point or so at peaks for lvta or lonaer. Turnover for the two hours was around 400,000 shares. Closlna? Quotations: American Can BOH Am Car Si Fdy SI. Am Tel as Tel loou Anaconda Calif Packing ttt Tractor Commonwealth St Sou Curtis-Wright General Electno General Motors Gt Nor Ry pfd Illinois Central , , Int Harveater Kennecott , Lockheed Long-Bell "A" Montgomery Ward Ncih-KelT N Y Central Northern Pacific Pae Gaa El Packard Motor Penna R R Republic Steel Safeway Stores . Sears Roebuck Southern Pacific Standard Brands Trana-Amerlca ITnton OH Calli U S steel Warner Picture . a . S . Ml' , Sola . XI'. . 19t. . . . 10H , ai. . it . lHa . 1' . 33V, . 4W, . . . m. , 40 V, . 01 ' . 30V4 . 80S . mi . i'v . 52'i . 12 FUNERAL TTEBERT leROT WOOD Tne runerai service ur .... ... .... bert LeRoy Wood who passed away tn thl eity on June I. will take place from the chapel of Wards Klamath funeral Home. 923 High, on Monday. June S. at 2 p. m.. under the auspices of Klsmath Lodge No. 77 A St AM. Commitment services and Interment will follow in the family plot In Llnkvllle cemetery wltn tne rrv. victor ' .'".., , First Methodist church of flclaUng. Friends are Invited to attend tha services. and that the median -cost of the newspaper advertising anal yzed was approximately one fourth that of radio. I'm elad Lee DIDN'T have time, because as it was he took me down peg after peg for three single-spaced typewritten pages. The gist of it was that "figures don't lie, out liars ao figure." I certainly don't expect anyone to take the results of any poll or survey at face value. You just don't do that unless you know all about it and that's a matter of research in itself. Lee goes on: "You . hit the nail on the head in 'My Day' for Thursday when the coffee must have tasted better. All the surveys, the polls, or the ratings ever taken can't dispute one thing and that is circulation. You have 12 thousand subscribers, a mighty achievement, but not so much when you ' realize that The Herald and News is a fine newspaper, and everybody in your area should want to read it. If you had said more about that circulation figure and stay ed in bed all day Tuesday, you would have had en interesting column and not be out on a limb as you are . .- . The fact will always remain that in ad vertising results count first and foremost." Right, Lee. Any advertising, from printing a sign on a win dow with soap' on up, will get results if done rightly . . . and this includes radio. I abjectly apologize to Lee and all his brothers in arms of radio, for starting a discussion which can not be fully aired here. (And cut out that "Eleanor" stuff, Walter Winchell Jacobs!) CHICAGO. June 9 OTv Potatoes, arrtv als 07; on track 179: total shipment 1U; new stock supplies moderate: for best stock demano moderate, market steady: for off condlUon stock demand slow, market weak: California Long Whiles US No. 1. ;iM UO; UiuUlana Ullsa Triumphs US No. 1 washed U.oa 94.47: Mississippi Bliss Triumph US No. 1 unwashed 9.40. LIQUIDATION REDUCES GRAINS CHICAGO. Junt 3 lw Heavy lliuld. .Ion of future in the irain market to day drove all prtcta down, wheal and oat tailing at naw xaaonal low and rye off mora than lht cent from tha week'i histt at one tlm. Favorabla crvp weather and a privata report ci tl mating all una 11 (train yield would cubatanttally exceed harveiU In dicated a month ajro went principal fac tor In the downtrend. LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. June 3 (AP-WrAI Salable hois 1000: total 7500: ho market gener ally steady but slow: good and choice 180-270 lb. predominated et 913.73. the top: a few sale 280-330 lb. H1.75-SI-.1S: a few good and oholce 30-&30 lb. sows f 10:73-00: -other - weights and grades scarce: approximately aooo unsold, large ly support hogs; shippers took none: compared ' with week ago: good and choice lDO-270 lb. steady: all ollur welghta and tows unevenly steady lo U higher. Salable cattle 500: calve none! com pared rrlday last week: With recelgt well below a week ago, and at big mar kets under corresponding period a year ago, all classes fat cattle worked meas urably higher: fed steers and yserUnas 23-73. mostly 10 higher, although top only 20 up at S17.33; top highest since June 1MJ: best yearling- $17.23, halter yearlings (17.00: slock cattle eteady but alow, thin klnda glO.T3-tU.23: fed heif ers 2StO higher, bulk S13.73-gl6.00; scant run cows fully 80 up: bulls fully 29-40 higher; heavy sausage bull reached 1..40 at close, with bulk tl0.SO-al2.00. and most fat bulla lia.5O-13.B0: vealer gl9.0o-tlS.00: with "outs" t7.oo-10.00. Salable sheep 300: total 4000; com pared Frtdey lest week: Old crop wooled lambs 23-50 higher, ahom lambs lost all or early advance: ahorn ewe steady to 23 higher! good and choice fed wooled western lambs lia.oo-28, top tloMS: med ium and good tlfl.OO-flo. common and medium tl3.00-tl4.00; good and choice ahorn fed lamb No. 1 and No. 1 pelts tl3.7S-tl4.7S; top 414.75 at week' high Ume. medium and good shorn tamns tl2.7S-tl3.25; not enough spring lamhe offered to justify quotations: shorn na tive ewes $7.33 down, few cull and com mon lightweight t3.30-t3.ao. Lele Friday: Load good SO lb. Colorado fed lamb steady at 918.73, thorn lamb weak to mostly 25 lower, 1000 head mixed grade, mostly medium and good 37 lb. clip with No. 1 pelts tla.no straight. SOUTH IAN I-RANCISCO. June (AP-WFAI Cattle; For four day 830; compared Friday week ago: Medium grass and good fed steers, heifer and cows steady. One load good fad steers tl4.78. Medium gresa steer $13.00-80, medium feeder $12.80, medium slocker $11.80. Odd good cows $11.0040. Medium cow $10.00-78. common $0.00-f0. Cutter largely $7.30-$B.S0. Csnner $3.30-tT.23, medium gress bulls $10.00-30. 29 lower. Calves: For four dey 230 mostly tteady, tew choice vealer 314.00-30. Hogs: For four daya 4400 compared Friday week ego; Generally stady, top $14.73. Good sow M. BO down, no hold over, largest recelpta of year. Sheep: For four daya 8600 compared Friday week ago: Fully ateady. choice scarce. Week's bulk good to choice over 78 lb. lamba $14.18-$fs.oo. Many common to medium he liars tio.oo-lu.oo. Bulk good to choice shorn lamb tll.80-$13.O0. Shorn ewe top $4.33 and shorn yeer lings $13.00, extram lata sales, cult awes $2.00-80. Courthouse Records - " Marriage JACKBON-HEOCJ, Homer Clvda Jack con. 28, V. B. army. Native of Oklahoma, resident of Tulelake. Hltma Marffuarttia He. 39. bookkeeper. Native of Minne sota, resident of Klamath Fall. Complaint filed Ora I OUIoclc vers ua Dean GIHock. Sult for divorce, charge cruel and In human treatment. Couple married in Reno August 34, 1916, w. Lamar Town send, attorney for plaintiff, t Jflstlc cearl Raymond FtnnU Peter, Void foreign license, rined fS.S0. George James Bennett Vagrancy. Ninety day suspended. Arthur. Alfred Hitter. Void foreign li cense. Fined aft, so. George Wilson Martin. Failure to atop at stop sign. Fined 98.80. Ropert s, Ieovell. Drunk In a private place. Thirty day suspended. VITAL STATISTICS CRUMRINBJ Bom at Hillside hospital, Klamath Falls, Ore., June 3, 1044, to Mr, and Mrs, W, M. Crumrlne, 2187 Madison, a boy. Weight: 0 pound 4 ounces. r-A Gem of Thought From I del la's- Thar It young lady nimd Elan . With nic flgur and cut baby ttaret; Thii lovely young Mitt Swbt$ iht'i mm had a kin - My Cloth, no wondtr th iwtiril Up Sticks 25c AT I DELIA'S -Mfi a Qal! Phone 848$ LAST GROUP OF GUESTS VISITS KF G01AND0S Six wounded torvlce men- three from Mare island naval hotultal and tliroo from the bent' Ue naval hoipllnl are enjoying their atay in Klamath Falla a guests of the Commando. They uro the Inst men to bo brouitht here under the Commando proj ect, all effort, hereafter to bo devoted to ontortnlnmcnt of men tationod In this locality. Tho men are gueita at the homos of Mr. and Mm. Leslie Rogers and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter. PFC Clifford Elliott, 31, of uorham. Maine, saw IB months overseas service and was wound ed In tha Marshnllt. Sorgeant John W. Hamilton, 23, Phoenix City, Ala,, hasn't been homo for two years. Ho saw duty at American Samoa, British Samoa, New Zealand, New Caledonia, Guadalcanal and Bougainville. He was wounded at the lattor place. PFC Clsronco F. Yarbor, S3. Rlcovlllo, Tcnn., was with the second wave that hit Guadalcan al. He was In Now - Zealand eight months. He received his wounds at Tarawa. Eldon R. Mitchell, AMM Ie. navy, 23, Is from Centralis, 111., and was wounded at Kaneohe air station, Hawaii, at the raid on Pearl Harbor. In many raids was Homer W. Woodward, S 1c, navy, whose home Is Chntnnoogn. Tenn. He saw service on a new tyne de stroyer, and wns nt the Mar shnlls, Tarawa, Truk and Rnbatil. uieo c, McMiiuon, umu, hasn't seen his home in Hous ton, Tex., for two years. "I with I was back in my outfit," he said. Lois S e r r u y s, Commando mother, nnld that the decision to give up their wounded service men's nrolcct wns the "hardest ever made by tho girls." A total of 110 men were brought here, all wounded in commit ana none having hod a previous furlough for home. The Commandos still receive letters and cards from men who have, been here as their guests. Soma have been dlschnrged, some have returned to duties, and others are In hospitals. Mrs. Serruys said! "Please thnnk the people of Klamath Falls for their coopera tion and liberal donations Funds we have for the wounded men's project wjll now go to en tertainment of men at the Marine Barracks, home from combat sorvicc." - - - ALLWORKERS MAY RETURN ON MONDAY PORTLAND, Ore., June 3 W) As Oregon and Washington lo cals of the CIO International Woodworkers of America fell Into line with back-to-work rec ommendations of district and In ternational officers. It appeared today that all 40,000 men who walked out of more than 100 northwest lumber mills and log ging operations In the past weeks will be back on Jobs Monday. The 20,000 members of the AFL Lumber and Sawmill Work ers union already are at work. First three CIO locals to vote to follow suit were the Portland union with 1300 members out of six lumber mills, the Aberdeen, Wash., local with 1200 members employed In four mills, and the Tacoma local. The men quit work In protest to the national war tabor board's denial of wage Increases. They agreed to return after the WLB promised to consider reviewing Its decision June 12 if workers returned. 14 Arrested On Draft Charges BALTIMORE. June 8 fn The federal bureau of Investi gation arrested 14 men and one woman today, accusing thorn of evading the draft or assisting Inductees - to feign mental ail ments In order to obtain defer ments. John W. V 1 n c e n t, special agent in charge of the Balti more FBI office, said those ar rested included a navy petty officer and two army non-commissioned officers assigned to tho fifth regiment armorv In. ductlon station. Vincent said- that amounts ranging from $180 to (900 had been paid for help In obtaining psycho-neurotic rejections, en titling inductees to 4-F classifications., flAArl arlvstrf test fnf . ttrnmA nra in tho classified. . . . U. S. ARMY UNIT HORIZONTAL 88 It Is part of 1 Dptotd U In th Insignia of slgntolth thV.S.- I'. YOUR FAMILY, Would You Ltav Thm Financially IndependW? YOUR - BCPBCSENTrNO TBS EQUITABLE LIFE . I Assurance Society I M N.-ftti Phone imj I Frontier, i TJ. S. Army 9 Dress, edge 10 Rail It Anger IS Decay L 14 Scold It Swtet potato 18 Upward 1 Continually lOBschalor of Music (sbbr.) 131 Him '33 Georgia (abbr.) VERTICAL ' "' 1 Seine 3 Print measure 3 Com pots point 32 Expungtrs ej moan .a negative 3 Belie 37 East Indies svoiumn (sour.) l oymooi I or ea-libUFI S V'1 nickel Arid t Expectations 11 Ardtnt 13 Groove j4 Beside 4(llM.T 2 Bsbylonltrt uioon-gori si mw -'MVftiui9 it 01 OW, M Canvas sh.lter JJf?.c''miUon WBmboollk. 31 Drunkards IPTT 30 Couple 31 Sloth 32 Like 33 Smile broadly 3 Scatter 38 Htmmer heed ' 39 Mature 41 Whirlwind 42 Yt (Sp.) .44 Symbol for calcium , UWe 4T Daybreak (comb, form) .48 Peer Oynt'S mother '80 Greater In etature 83 Sped B4Saeat1e 88 Apportion 187 Dltngure -like Birds 34Muilc not 38 The godr 37 Lance 3 0nui 01 grouts IT MEvr(eSi .." (tbttii nrnr VQOl rr-nn fcsi::::;::?. 2l .llimtty Sergeant Harold Conner ei Klamath Wins More Medals SSst. Harold E. Connor, son of Mr. and Mr. Emery O. Con nor, 2701) Kane, was awarded the Air Medal and three Oak Leaf clustors, for meritorious achieve ment, according to word which has reached Klamath Falls from the European theater of opera tions. Conner was previously award ed a citation for merllorlus ac- Shaw Lumber company's woods operations at Tionesta re mained on a non-union basis to day, fallowing an NLRB election held there Friday. Out of 58 votes, 34 voted no union, 20 for tho CIO nd 2 for the AFL. This Is the third election called at this operation, which has never bcon organized by un ion labor. Two cookhouse employes voted AFL and that unit of the Tionesta operation will be affili ated with that union. The Shaw mill at Tionesta Is an AFL plant. Uon In the destruction ol tra alrplunes while Mrvlni it man on bombardment ma over enemy occupied Euroj 'Tliecniirniieandcooliicsi, skill displayed by this ttta man upon this occulon m great credit upon himself id armed forces,1' Die citation n, Conner was t Southern Pad. employe prior to enterlM S armed force. HU wile, Ski to resides In this city. A Snell Conftrs With Cordon; WASHINGTON, Jul (I Governor Earl Snell ol Ottfg conferred her yeittrdijK! Senator Guy Cordon 0W: whom he appointed Inttnast cetsor to the Ult Sea Chnrlrt L. McNsry. y Governor Snell, tn M home from the lovimorfm ference nt lleriney, Ft, H they dlscuued the Increutt forest (Ire protection tvk from $2,900,000 to H.J and tho proposed $3,000.! 000 postwar rotd cowtnxuj bill. 5 Sunset Crtter mtlonil va ment. Arizona, wu vtilWt 11.8B8 pcrsont durtal 1W OUR RESPONSIBILITY Prior to Pearl Horbor, we wld hundreds of new and usod automc- ; biles and assumed the responjlblnty of keeping them In good servlceobi condition. This responsibility wos comparatively eosy before the wor ... but since If has become o bit more difficult due to the various shortobles, both In materials ond manpower. Parts stocks have been hard to keep up to par. Personnel has con stantly been a source of worry, du ', to entry Into the armed services ana restless shifting around of men in -general. But In spite of these difficulties : we have fully reallied the Impor.-,, fane of our obligation to this cony. munlty, where dependable transporj totion Is so . vital, and have solvea each of these problems as they came.;, up. - : We have been able to maintain a , : complete stock of genuine porK or- spreading out to new sources . -r , ; . ply, as well as straining the usuol . r" ...... i,., a. Unva kept sources to tne umir. - , ,u kv . a fine erew of men on the Job W , keeping our place an ottrcKtlwo"" In which to work and a profitobl . place to be employed. ' It has been a struggle at tlmef, 'but we think we have It licked, aw . will continue to give the best serv e" to the rolling public for the dura y , tion and after final victory. , ; , We wish to express our W"jJ tion to the public for their standing patience during these time of small Inconveniences.' n.rL: R. Miller GOOD AUTOMOBILE SERVICE Corner 7th and Klamath .1 ".'r Co; m