Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 29, 1944, Page 3, Image 3

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    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PACI THREE
MIDI :
in."----- - ,
CARRIES ON .'-elP4v
s-ifct Tit Ill III
I WASHING '
(, iiml ro ui! 'itn'iiviii. iww
, ' meinplocl I HrlMK of A
.ml Attin'-.v Clcnuial N..i
Is' i liicll of Simtllo, wim cur
Hinrwurcl toilay In a UUMI
""0'.., ,' , 'v lo biuiu .principle
tjcwdKHVE-rnniyiil."
ISC hUni' co,
1 "ll,l'.r . """"f ""l1
Clio IiiI.tv.-i.cI In a c .ai t
K core In behalf of Thoninii
fl"... , tm oar v inenibw
V0,i ... .i. mmiIii li iiul nnu
! private law practice .
(Kilo dw mud comment,
,2 had not noon the Lll
ill dwunii'iit. t'oreoriiii was not
tached for ciiiiliient.)
Tin ultorney Ki-neral naked
i.t week for Llttell's rcalKiiu
on Krmmd.i of )cronal In-
'Sul'utiHl'. who linn refund
-null, took thu position In hi
te to the senate rou), It u
.deritood, that their differ
net! itemmed from "my refu
t ,,i.imIi wllli conduct of
le attorney iionernl which was
fcntrary to basic i principles of
Xt IfOVlTMIIIl'MV,
Doth officials yesterday sub
illtcd to the comnilllou stale
iouU on their position which
io committee had requested.
i his. Diddle Is reported to
lye denied Ills request for the
r,ionuiinii resulted from toll-
my Uittell K'lve the commit-
Ife when u invcHUKiurn mo sur
i,. nrnnnrlv and uther war
uesllon.
The two men, Diddle said, hud
iiK-ltiindiiiK persoiiiil differ
ic which prevenle.l harmmii
id linndlinK of justico depart
icnt affairs.
oorprints Under
ody Not Preserved
SEATTLE, Nov. 20 (I') Two
istlnct footprints found be
ta th the hnnainii body of
mllclmo Ollvotto, Itnllnn
rvlce unit privnte who mot
ii death In n disturbance with
ejro soldiers at Fort Lnwton
rctntly, were not preserved,
aj. William Orcm, provost
archal nt the fort nt the time
the Incident, testified nl court
iirtlal procccdinitH yesterday.
Ho said It has been found
Inpractlcnl" to make casts of
lit prints and that they had
lot been measured,
Mora than 30 Americans and
titans were Injured in the
lol. Thlrty-nlno neuro soldiers
ft tclni! tried on chnrRcs of
lotlng and three with rioting
aid murder.
otary Director
o Visit Klamath
John B. nclllv of Whllticr.
pill., director of Rotary Inter
ktlonnl, will visit the Klnmath
falls Rotary club and sneak at
It mcctlnx Friday noon nt the
nmrti notei.
Rolllv has been a member ot
It Rotary club of Whittler since
628, and is a past president of
lit club. He has served Rotary
litraatlonal as director, dls-
in Rovcrnor and committee
lombcr.
Ho Is owner of the Fluid
fceked Pump company, mniui-
crarers oi oil well pumping
"ipilR'IU in L.OS jnicios, emu.
Mibut Stock
piprovement Noted
SEATTLE Niw () MP1 An.
Hng there has been an im
rovement In the halibut stocks
II fishing urnimrls i-ni,rninnln.
N of norlh Pacific halibut
iiTnien yesterday nsked tlic
llCrnat Onnl f'lclini-ln mml.
Vn tO Innrnvn nn Ihn-MiM nf
Iw million pounds in their an-
" limit.
The nresnnt llmll 1. nt onn nnn
hd; "
i Umi...
i " , oniruM" n n
toiv probl.mi Uok liirdl
!Jytlption esn undermine energy
tk.i r, v" 11 1 Contains no
m t lTWtoroJl(Tcr.nt
2Ntlo,oflOve1 jctsolol ngnd"
ilW. "Tma ovcc 60 y ro.
26 Convlnccr Box.
Pumice Blocks Manufactured
fA'm J1 Jl
ifillABLiET9i-N"V !
(WORD SUGGESTION'
Turning out from 350 to 500 pumlc. blocks an hour for the construction of tha naw eold
llorog. - plant at Tulolok. ii tha blockmanufoc luring machina brought hara from th. aast by
Klamath Concroto Plpa company. Pumice ii mined at Glass mountain, procassad at tha com
pany s plant at Ainshoa. and shipped from there directly to tha building sita. Manufaetura of
oiocKs Irom pumice, a local product, may become ona of Klamath's most important industries.
WOMAN PRESENTED
WITH BRONZE STAR
Pumice Block Manufacture
May Become Major Industry
By PHYLLIS COLLIER
The manufacture of construc
tion blocks from pumice, the
white "floallnii rock" typical of
this area, may become one of
Klnmath's major Industries.
The blocks, made of cement,
Kround pumice and a small
amount of fine sand, have
proved hlnhly successful as a
oulldinK product, as they arc
produced cheaply, have hiiih in
sulation finalities and are fire
proof, light-weight and long
wearing.
Pumice Is a porous volcanic
product actually a hardened
glass fnain, which can be re
verted Into glass by a smelting
process. Large deposits of thu
substance are found near Tion
csta and Chemult, whero several
local people own mining claims.
The first pumice bricks to bo
manufactured in the northwest
was In 1037, when Frank Ham
blet, then owner of the Klamath
Concrete Pipe company, began
experimenting with tho product.
After working on the develop
ment of the high-typo of block
for seven years, llnmblet sold out
last February to Floyd L. Sum
mers, Calvin Peyton and Miles
Stewart.
Tile new owners of the com
pany sent cast for ' a large
pumlcc-block machine, - which
turns out from 330 to 500
creamy-while, uniform 8x8x18
inch bricks an hour. The ma
chine is now set up in Tulelakc,
manufacturing blocks for the
construction of the new storage
plant there. The pumice is
brought directly lo Tulelakc
from the Ainshoa plant by
truck, in order that bricks
might be marie on the building
site lo save shipping costs.
Al the company's large proc
essing plant at Alnshca, on the
Great Northern line, pumice
mined nt Glass mountain is
screened, crushed and segregat
ed. From Ihere It is shipped by
carlot lo points nil over the
country. '
Among buildings constructed
here of the pumice blocks arc
lli-io al Wi-nc-ma fnrms. the
npnrtment house at Market and
Elm, the Specialized Service
building on Main, the John Giac
omlnl homo at Merrill, the R. B.
Mahan home on Newcastle and
the V. L. Parks' home on Kane.
Tho blocks have been used this
spring for numerous pump
houses, milk-houses, potato cel
lars and other buildings where
insulation is necessary, and the
recently-completed FHA devel
opment, the Evelyn apartments
In Medford was built of the
pumice product.
Promoters of the pumlce-brick
industry arc confident that the
blocks will be one of the most
popular fire-proof products for
post-war construction, and Nich
olas Long, chairman of the
chamber of commerce industrial
development committee, feels
that their manufacture will Dlav
a large part in the industrial de-
vciopmeni or Mamnin county.
Mrs. Zona Brughman, nurses
aide at Klamath Valley hospital,
was presented with tho Bronze
Star, awarded posthumously to
her eon, Tech. 4th Grade Bever
ly A. Gllmorc, 29, In a ceremony
held at the hospital at 2 p. m.
Tuesday.
The presentation was made by
Captain John L, Melton, post ad
jutant at Camp White, who was
uccompanled here by PFC Jos
eph D. Barber. Mrs. Brughman
has also received the Purple
Heart for her son. Young Gil
more was killed by a Jap sniper
in the New Georgia group in
1043.
According to the citation, the
Bronze Star was awarded Gil
more for meritorious services
against the Japanese forces from
January 10, 1943 to February 9,
1943. During this period, Gil
more performed outstanding
services In his assigned duties as
a' mechanic in anti-tank company.
During the operation, . due to
sliortage of transportation, Gil
more reclaimed and put into
running order, two abandoned
vehicles. One vehicle, a one-ton
international truck, was repair
ed through Gilmore's mechani
cal ability and used until, the
cessation of combat. Another
vehicle, a two and one-half ton
GMC army truck, which had
been captured and disabled by
the Japanese, was found and re
paired immediately by Gilmore.
In addition to his assigned
duties, during tnis period, Tech
DEVELOPING
. ENLARGING
PRINTING
PHOTO SERVICE
211 Underwood Bldg,
Gllmoro organized and led pa
trols on - reconnaissance and
combat missions," the citation
set forth.
Witnessing the ceremony was
Mrs. Brughman's second son,
1st. Sgt. James C. Gilmore of C
company, Marine Barracks. Mrs.
Brughman has lived here since
August 2, coming to Klamath
Falls from Los Angeles.
Eva Burkhalter
Attends Convention
Eva Burkhalter of the Klam
ath Union high school was
among the representatives from
Oregon, Washington, Idaho and
Montana to attend the regional
convention of the Delta Kappa
Gamma convention which was
held at the hotel Meany in Se
attle, Wash., on Saturday and
Sunday, November 25 and 28.
The main speaker was Dr. M.
Margaret Stroh, national presi
dent of the organization, and
Dr. Catherine Nutterville, vice
president, was chairman of the
convention. , .
Over 250 were present for
the three sessions, and Miss
Burkhalter was the only mem
ber from the Alpha chapter.
Now She's
Walking On Air
ZvtTT d&r, pople wbo retHy mffer from
tired, burning- feet en leftmlnc Uie qalck,
thrlllinf comfort that lice In m Jer of Iee
Uint. under the touch of this froctr-wblu
cream, roe emn sctnmllr feci Ured muiclce
Telex, as rour feet respond almoit IniUntlr
to Its refreshlne; coolness. To help soften
corns end callouses, there's nothing- better
than Ice-Hint. 80 tet a jar todar and enior
tha blissful feellne; that comes with all.dsr
foot comfort. At all druffaiaul. '
Proper .Diagnosis ;
Leads to Alcoholism
Cures, Says Doctor
PORTLAND, Nov. 29 (PJ Al
cohollcs can be successfully
treated only if trained workers
diagnose the factors that lead to
excessive drinking, ' Including
age, occupation and marital stat
us, Dr. Seldon D. Bacon said
here.
Dr. Bacon, of Yale univer
sity's laboratory of applied phy
siology, told the alcoholic stud
ies conference that fines and Jail
sentences as cures are "ludi
crous." Traditional.methods nave fail
ed to solve the problem and "we
must have greater clarification
of types of alcoholism, testing of
treatment and new discover-
ies," he declared. , i
He said that 99 per cent of at- '
r-nVlfll lr fall tnti ,a,rnn -il-. 1
classifications, and many era!
good beta . for treatment.
Starts INSTANTLY to nllm
MUSCULAR
ACHES-PAINS
SomMssand Stiffness
For bleued prompt relief rub on
powerfully soothing Mueterole. It
actually help break up painful local
congestion, bo much easier to apply than "-
mustard Blaster. "No use- Vo muss t
inlA MutttraUl" Just rub It on.
Ia J
StraBgtnal
na
"'".;.;, The. ;
Star Beauty Salon
HAS
3 MORE COMPETENT
OPERATORS -
it
CORDIA NASH
. VELMA'SELF
MABEL ELLIS
ft
GIVE ONE OF OUR LOVELY ,
COLD WAVES FOR A
CHRISTMAS PRESENT
Nervous, Restless
On "CERTAIN DAYS" 01 Tha Month?
If functlonM periodic rtlnturbnneea
mnkr you irrl nervous, tired, reetlPM,
'drnKRPd out" nt auch time try a
ttioiiJi Lydln R. Plukhnm'n VoRfttAblo
Compound lo rrllovo uc, symptoms. It
helps nature! Plnkhnm's Compound In
Kino ft ffrnnd stomnchlo tonic. Follow
label directions. tV'or(t trying!
LYDIA E. FINKHAM'S Sk1
. Scars packs smartness
fl.i :o m r
and value into new DRESSMAKER BAGS!
For instance, this novel tophandle bag
is our budget version of a high style success'
Rayon cordettc with woven plastic stripes.
A gorgeous hetvy lucite clasp! Black Or brown.
MRS.
133 South 8lh Street
Announcing The OPENING
Of
The Kindergarten
(Pra-School Education)
818 Walnut St. Between Postoffice and S. 9th St.
It will be open for your inspection on Saturday,
Dec. 2, and Sunday, Dec. 3
Dec. 4 Open For Enrollment
(Number Limited to 25)
Supervisor
RUTH WILLMOTH JONES
Directors
Or. and Mrs. Boyd F. Spraguo
HOURS
9 A. M. to 2:30 f. M.
(Lunch Included)
For Information
PHONE 6527
.' . Win V
1.5 5S.-V:
''''0"atrS
. - aim
kuahK TO MAKE
IAOREWEWORABIEI
MivaFo,Mon.-r.ci;oy.loic-;
a(S.0r..H.r.or..morfdr...for
' .' rion and .v.7 fifl"'-
V rurcha... Molina $10 or mora.
moy bt
4
I'D. :
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"""CIO INDiatSTION-
EASY PAYMENTS
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