HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
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PUC SCHEDULES I-
'BLAGK SNOW
HMGSHERE
Tuesday, June 20, has been
designated as the date when Pub
lic V 1 1 1 1 1 ie s Commissioner
George. Ji. Flagg,. accompanied
by his chief engineer, David
Don, will visit Klamath Falls to
conduct a public hearing on sun
dry complaints from institutions
and persons of this city against
the Klamath Heating company.
Mayor J. H. Houston and City
Attorney J. H. Carnahan have
been notified of the event, and
the mayor has been requested, to
provide a suitable room where
witnesses and interested citizens
mav be accommodated.
The issue in the Klamath Falls
hearing "was raised by several
complaints and requests that the
commissioner require the local
heating utility to supply its cus
tomers with adequate heat at all
times. Control of soot, or so
called "black snow" is also in
volved. In previous hearings it was
agreed that separate studies of
the problems should be made by
the engineers of the public utili
ties commissioner, by the city
government and by Dr. George
W. Gleason of Oregon State col
lege. It is presumed that the re
sults of those studies w 1 1 1 be
available at the hearing here on
June 20.
Notices have been sent to the
city, the First National bank, the
school district directors, to thea
tre owners and numerous busi
ness houses. The hearing is open
to all interested parties,. ... . , j
Tree Fallers Face
Manslaughter Charge
ALBANY, June 10 () Man
slaughter charges today faced
three men whom a coroners'
jury held responsible for the
death of three persons and the
injury of seven others when a
tree fell on a Valley Lines stage.
Justice of the Peace Victor
Olliver bound them over to the
circuit court yesterday. They
re: Glenn Ohling. owner of the
farm on which the tree stood,
and Charles Brown and William
Lytic both of Cascadia, who cut
down the 200-foot fir tree 100
feet from the highway. Ohling
furnished $500 . bond.
Lumbermen Finish
Safety Conference
EUGENE, June 10 (IP) Lum-
oermen from 10 western states
and British Columbia conclud
ed a western, safety conference
on employment of disabled
soldiers and logging safety prob
lems Friday.
Importance to veterans "' of
physical' and mental rehabilita
tion was stressed by Ted Kep
ner, Cathlamet, Wash. M. T.
Owre, West Coast Lumber com
mission, and W. G. Collins, lum
ber Wimnanv nffiolal Gamnn
Calif., spoke on the place of or
ganized labor and management
in saieiy programs.
Klamath Soldier Decorated
K l
Staff Sergeant Charles H. Stone, Klamath Falls. Or., received
the Silver Star, for gallantry , in action with the fifth army in
Italy from Maj. Gan. .Geoff roy. Keyes, coramanderof a fifth army
formation. (APS photo from fifth army). ;. f
Adams Tunnel
Nears Finish .;;
DENVER, June 10 After
nearly , four years . of drilling
and blasting through 13 miles
of, mountain rock a pilot; bore
one and three-fourths inches in
diameter -was complete Friday
in the Alva.B. Adams tunnel of
the Colorado-Big Thompson wa
ter diversion project. : ;
Today during , boring com
pletion ceremonies, the remain
ing 30 feet of rock will be cut
through. -The tunnel is near
Estes park in northern Colora
do' and is part of a project
which ultimately will bring sup
plemental irrigation water from
west of , the Rocky mountain
continental divide to" rich farm
lands east of the mountains.
Secret Devices
Aid Paratroops
: SUPREME HEADQUARTERS.
ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY
FORCE, June 10 (P) American
parachute troops dropping into
the Ste. Mere Egllse sector of
France below Cherbourg car
ried out the most successful air
borne operation in war history,
it was disclosed today, and only
about 2 per cent of more than
1000 -.RAF and U. S. planes op
erating on D-Day were lost.
New secret devices enabled
parachute troops to land on des
ignated places even through, lay
ers of clouds, a high command
report of the entire American
British airborne invasion oper
ation .said. . ! .... .
MElND
WOMEN IN
SERVICE
i Ensign Dean . French, son of
Mr.- and Mrs. E. L. French, resi
dents of Klam
ath Falls until
their deaths sev
eral years . ago,
enlisted in 'the
uavy eight yews
ago; and. this
winter received
his commission
as ensitfn. Ho
has seen service
in all - the. the
aters of. war,
and at present
has-been assigned to a new ship
which recently left Seattle for
the Pacific zone, v-- "
; i..-.-.". : . i '
ARRIVES' SAFELY Word has.
J. Robinson, telling of his sufe ar
rival somewhere in Ituly. Mclvln
joined the arm- gtr rz V
temocr, tic
was graduated
from Klamath
Union high
school that
spring and is n
former Herald
and News car-;
rier. Prior toW 1 1 ui
n
his enlistment he was employed
by the Standard on company in
a local, station. He Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Robinson
of 1433 Derby. -
The Robinson's son, Jack, of
Robinsons Delivery.- is stationed
at Camp Barkley, Tex., and an
other son, Willis, owner of the
delivery business, reported for
duty in the navy, May 29.
BOND SELLERS
SET FAR START
OF LOAN DRIVE
WASHINGTON, Juno 10 (VP)
Millions of volunteer bond-sellers
here lined up today for the
$18,000,000,000 Fifth War Loan
drlvo which starts Monday. ;
Some 8,000,000 employes of
retail stores tackled a bond
sale .quota of $1,500,600,000
which they hope to ralso by
selling JI100 worth each of the
popular-typo "E" bonds. -,.
Already ' there were Indica
tions that the Invasion of west
ern Europo had stepped up bond
purchases, Tho total paid into
the treasury this month, through
June 7, for war bonds was
$278,210,000, nearly three times
tho amount turned in during the
same period last year.
Admiral Ernest J. King, commander-in-chief
of the U. S.
fleet, Issued a statement declar
ing that the support of every
American as expressed through
continuous war bond purchases
Is essential to tho success of
the war.
"Wo havo a right to bo con
fident," he snld, "but we must
bo realistic; tho war is not yet
won."
WRITER CAPTURED
LONDON. June 10 W The
German radio said today that
James W. Lee of Oklahoma,
whom It identified as a war cor
respondent for tho Jewish tele
graph agency of New York, had
been taken prisoner presum
ably in France.
Contlnvoot show Sat. - Son.
Box Olfleo Opena lZ.-St -
- ENDS TODAY -
"In Old
Oklahoma"
John - Worno-Mtrth. , Scott
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Tails of the Border (Animals) -k Latest World News Events
Flashes of
Life
By The AuocUted P'
EXPENSIVE GROCERIES
ELKHAHT, Ind. "Foritct
bout It," War Worker Wnrron
U U-lrlrlni. t Alnltni1ri liolll-fi lift.
er telling thorn in mi enrlior call
that hl f pay cicck nan neon
lost or itolen. "I jtit found out
my dautlhtor he'i two
chowed It up to mnko apltbulli,"
o o 0
BEHIND THE TIMES
BEDFORD, Ind The morn
ing of tho Invasion nobody could
get tho Catholic church boila to
ring out tho nowa.,Tho electric
ringing device had ntuck,
Thurwlay night tho boll)
abruptly , stnrlod ringing and
rang for halt an hour.
Everybody thought another In
vasion nad come.
MEANY
ROCHESTER Henry North
rup, leaving hli rod and line un
attended for a moment while
fishing from tho shore of Lake
Ontario, turned to oo It bolng
towed Into tho lako.
Ho aiked another angler, who
wai flailing from a boat, to re
trieve the rod. The latter com
plied, Returning to ihore, he
towed Northrup the rod after re
moving the fish.
"I ll keep thU" he ald to
Northrup. ''I caught It, didn't
SHEEP POWER
CLEVELAND, Ohio six
sheep went to work, for the city
today as. lawn mowers at the
sewage treatment plant They
were produced by the utilities
department as grass got tailor
and help got shorter.
o o
NUTS
Louise Bearwood, whose father,
vapi, mien ucarwooo, is one ot
a letter and an autograph photo-
iirapii i rum ino gonorai.
Linda won the general over
bv Mnrilno- him Minnli th.n i,n.
obtainable In Italy. They were
such a delicacy he passed them
out at siaii oinner.
The Sin War Loan drhre starts
Monday. Star-al-hornet can back
the Inrosion to Insure vielory.
Hen Norland, Insurance.
J 'J h diMTTT5
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CONTINUOUS HIIOW DAH V ttOX U
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it Ends Today J
'RACKET
William Boyd
SUNDAY- MONDAY
SHE COUtD SEA
10T Of WOMAN
IF SHE 60T THE
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HtMch tin in ft
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In Teckniceler
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kV . you more gaiety
JOHN HARVEY MARTflA'RAYE - JOE E BROWN EUGENE PALLETTE - SKATI
CHARL
Ends Todoy
"KNICKER
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Sl.rrlnr
NKI.SON T.DOY
IVAK
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