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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1945)
USE IB MEAT CEILINGS URGED LsilINGTON, Juno 11 MP) ioiicral increuwi in con I m requested of congress L i by James C. Downs Jr., !' testified before the nowii" -,,., iin. nnw fm commmco tuiipiuurn lulr..iri..,l will, nn lmmlni.nl lio jhowdown on whother P1 . ..lnl nrnifrnm will 'continued without mBjor K't control," Downs told r house group, "is unique. F u nnnfrn m In t ini I, "ho only rogulntlon which effective at its original r . tni... t irfiru runt in nrnn hi, discrimination against the , of real ostute." jlalmWK to rciiicoeiu "."V".- rt ',inn U nnnnnllnu to eon. ,s hecnuso OPA has "Ignored" it he tcrmca cnnKrvsnionai ii-nilnns for relief of real H jioldors. Introducing Robert Millar, marine harmonica playar. BATTLE, Juno 11 ') The Ct Coast Lumbermn as- P. '.V""V ..." ."V'7 m"-. fr 1110 i "u w -itcd 854,330,000 board foot grow stocks were 381,000,- Duaru it-uii eekly production that month aged 130,032.000 ubout IQ.UUU uiuiur inu April uvor I and 80.0 oor cent of the I44 average. Weekly ship Iti m winy Bveruuca id f ,0.1a, and new orocra hvltubcu snO ftf.A Unaier! t.i A r.lU Lentil uvernKod 129,125,000 Oracra, i i,qji,uuu uuuru Licks of this yenr were: LrOQUCllUIl, il.U lU.Jdl.UUU j .nuirtii i drm sir nnn hgu and 3.157.215,000 the nn l. -I A tA O Juminum Official Speak at Lunch fORTLAND, Juno 11 (IP) 1, 1 1"1 .1. . -1 FUr V. LHVI0, I'llllllllltlll UI I 1 M A I . . I n oonrn ui iiuiiiinuui ivuin- t n Amnrlfn will annalr at ice and industry luncheon June ID. Davis is president of the board rusiecs oi xuncninK, iiuna, worslty, eastern chairman of China emergency fund, and Ictor of United China relief. no rcccivcn me oracr fro jade, highest Chinese gov pient honor accorded civil- ft Robert Miller Dreamer, Harmonica Player, Daddy By WALTHAUD DIETS CHE (Editor's Note: This Is the iirsL nr n mr m nf innni .1 actcr sketches). A thousand men will never forget Guadalcanal, the suspense of air rairlft. lnntr ufnt,.i.Aa moonlit dugouts, and a tiny i-iHiums nurmonica walling to palms and sands and seas. Clinrnrtnrlatl.n1U, n u - - 1 .j, n v u v 1 1 Miller, a blue-eyed Irishman. iiuiiiiuiuca star or pelican s 7th war ioun Pond show, was de WAR SHACKS SUITED TD I THE SOFT JOB By EARL WHITLOCK lould the unexpected hap nd your graduating son piugmcr asK your aavice 11 we worK r of them d get Into y to steer way from lng that tely rescm a "soft" That's the st handl es youngster 6 have. The I kind of a I lob wnrlh M Is one that he himself iiwrenca up to Just the right ftency for a wholo lot of l hard work. Jo forlunato kid today tho wate man, for that matter, one who has a reasonably J ""iRnment and tho ablll i. ch,. willln8ness to ban. Soft Jobs result In soft I I know, tho envy of all other kids is tho youth teps, on graduation Into I" where a minimum of fn? d "ces a maximum of in, ' Ll,,ton yenrs the boy &2b. ,l,y to do a stint of K pasi tne sine fust B cIoud of suc Is' in Memory Garden." WASHINOTOM .Tun. 11 list, planners can just forget all about those "nnnor-thln har.W that the government has built as emergency war hou.ilmr uiiuuKnuui me country. It was nn nIH mnn I mm ct Paul, quoted In the Portland urcgonian, who applied that description to tho buildings in house workers at the Kaiser snipyaran on tne Columbia river nenr PortlnnH Cm Portland, on the one side, and havo been worrying some about the ultimate fate of the war- hnrn Inwn with lt 19 1n nmll.. dwellings and 10,000' dormitory uniia. nnn mat concern is re- IlCGIPn All Iht-nlltfh thA ntoit whKrn thf DnuAPnmant hi. to provide thousands of homes iur wurncrg wno swarmea into to new war industries. type housing is concerned, there's iiv iil-uu w wuu, auya ine na ttnnnl hniiclntf Dlmlnletrallnn It'fl ant tn ivrnin Hnwn twn vmm after the war tintncq rnnvrpju grants a stay. Naviaation. Erosion At Bay To Be Talked rutiiLntiu, June u navigation and erosion condi tions at Tillamook bay, also ..vuuv- .llipuibllKIIH) .Till un discussed at a hearing in Tilla mnnlr nnnntu rtnti Vimioa Tn1r ID U. S. District Engineer Ralph n. luaor announced nere. Ln nnn 'l linnp an rt Dim hpflr, Ing involves recent emergency appropriation of $120,000 to check Bayoccan peninsula erosion. til main inn. fying reality. ("I know I'm a dreamer, but sometimes I'm just Plajn nuts"). Like Idol Alan iadd, he is a cherub-faced rebel. Emotion is his master, kindness, his ideal. But he is Independent of friends, facts and the fictions of convention. Certainly tall, dark-eyed Cpl. Louis Kemper, also at the Ma rine Barracks, buddy of New Zealand, Guadalcanal, Tarawa Hawaii and the Marianas, can VOIIph fnr (lint , After "mothering" Miller (by i Bunioruyj, ne was oromntlv tnlH ntr- NOT need HIM; " Todav. nt 9d pu ..!: . ' uw til V JaiUIlS postwar radio, Hollywood, a .uuciiuauu nume ona a chain of night clubs when (and if) he gets the money. He reviews a history of abortive effort: icuHnrv nnn r unip nx i - (10 nil! IOStfr mnlhor'e rln.nnl - . .x. 0 uMuau -an flptor'o 1nh thnf ritni.j print shop that fatigued ajjuauiuuiu iaciory jobs and Jockeying to comment philoso- uuuv anyming except my harmonica!" Thnt It. lift rrtl-nryinin TTU- lias IIS OWn nvnttn n gle, "Song of India," Ravel's noiero-: Aincon drums and laments of the East. It has faith fully acenmnnninri nTlllor omtc, m iu, ne walked out on me -X" alter three lessons to relv on hiff nnr nn iUA nlA lor music. It cnrnnnrtnrl million aires of Detroit's Yacht club, It went alonff nn n fn,ir.Hau Au puuiuun io new xork City, where Rnh nprfnrmnrl fnr ff.4n. Bowes and, after wasting three aimes, learned to use an auto- mai. in H47 nn n enft summer night at the Detroit "Bowery," It bewitched "Beau ty, Brains and a Temper": pe tite Connie Robinson (now Mrs. Mlllpr nnH mnthnr nf mnn uaU. by) into permanent captivity. ALL ELASTIC Suspenders OREGON WOOLEN 81k and Main F017ERFDI LIQUID PROMPTLY RELIEVES MISERY . KILLS flERMS THAT CAUSE ATHLETES FOOT If you're diicounged about a main, tmucuit caog jusi uy xAmo a uoetor 8 wonderful soothing yet powerfully mtdl- eatad liauitt. Plnife nnnllratlnna mllavN Itchy soronras botwoon crackod, pwllnc toes ana on conuct actually Arill (srma that causa and spread Athlete's Foot. Firat trial nf Kama i-nnvtniut. lmitn nenrd nf aiirniMt All HriiMtnMa Send Zemo to boya in aayfaavMajara. aarrloa.8Blua. FIVIII aalalllW 1p ("1 CUNIAL HOME GIno Cunial, son of Mr. and m. a. u. iuniai OIZ040 Arthur, n ii u in e on a 30-dav leave en route to San Diego. Cunial has been In the Invasions nf Ta. rawa, Salpan, the Mnrshalls and Gilberts, and prior to that time served on the Lexing ton whlfh wno sunk In the South Pacific. He took his boot training at Far- AagUk, lUHi WARDLE SERVES FIFTH AIR lrnnrv di.ii;..: pine Islands Taking' part in the biff allied nffnn tk. T - r (Uat, DUIII I hiiu viiina sea Is MRlt Rlhrf t J. wardie. 30. a son of Mrs. Clara E. Wardie of Yakima, and T n UTn.IU Bly. A n . 9 n in. "Air Anaehea jfavfrti . 4 crack 345th bombardment group of the Sth air force in the Philippines, Sgt. Wardie is responsible for all maintenance of his unit's planes to keep them in combat condition. A 1033 graduate of the Klam ath Union high school, he en tered the army air forces in novemoer, jaau, ana Became one of the original mechanics 'it In tho rapidly expanding air force. A brother, TSgt. Wayne, is mau in me air lorce, KLAMATH MEN SERVE AN EIGHTH AIR FORPF. BOMBER STATION, England xogemer since tncy entered the service in June, 1944, these two Klamath Falls airmen were in England participating in the final phase of bombing opera tions against the crumbling reich. Left, is Sgt. William D. Daugherity. 19. son of Mr and Mrs. R. F. Daugherity, route 1, and right, is Sgt. Audine E. Fitzgerald Jr., 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Audine E. Fitzgerald Sr., 329 South Rogers. They are members of the same B-17 Fly ing Fortress crew of the veteran 384th bomb group. Daugherity was a tail section machine gun ner, while Fitzgerald manned me twin .DU-caiiber machine guns in the ball turret. The youths first met the day they left Klnmnth Folia n 4t.nl. tion center at Monterey, Calif. iiiey were logemer an through their various training periods in the Rtatea and lk 1 i England April 1. Their base is the one from which the first U. S. heavy bomber operation over Europe was made August 17, 1942, by 12 Fortresses. FREEL CITED PFC Robert IL Fre.l Mm S. 6th. Klamath Fall a n ber of the 30?th airborn engin eer battalion, has been award ed the Bronze Star for heroic conduct on April 7 on the Rhine river between Langcl and Hit-dorf. PFC Freel wna In nnarcf . fln fiRRnnlf hnnt with tho of evaenatincr nn tonlnto,! tf-nn of infantrymen on the enemy U .... I- a .1 nt-t i " uuuk ui me nnine river. Although wounded in the thieh On tfoa initial rirAttaina and thus unable to paddle, PFC creei remained ai nis post oi command, directing the infan trymen In their nnddllntf and guiding the boat into the cor rect spot on the far shore. ne continued to advise the Monday. Juno 11. 1945 GERALD AUP NEWS 8EVUI men on tho far shore and got his boat loaded and headed bark- tnunrd tha li it.. i ------ intiniij aiiure when he collapsed. "His con duct was In keeping with the highest traditions of the air borne fnreea ' nrlari altlni Ul , , . 1 -K' W1UIIK 111111 stated. GRISWOLD AWARDED Pvt. Eldnn F J of Mrs. Inez Lee Funderburke Of 920 Klamath, reeentlv ronal,,. ed the unit meritorious service! award for superior performance! in the battle of Germany. Hia job was in supply and GriiwoM served with the 75th quarter master company. H'wmuuiiiMiiii;iiiiiiiimmmtt ATTENTION FARMERS We pay highest cosh price for LIVE or DRESSED POUL TRY. Phone 5175, or see your nearest Safeway market operator. SAFEWAY BY Sonora Clear as a Bell At WORK SHOES LOGGER BOOTS OREGON WOOLEN lh and Main UHLIG'S 1026 Main DIil 35U l II I MIIMIMMIII 1 1 llliuj Bring Your Olds Home . . . k We know your OM and maintain a permanent record of all service and repair work. jlr Our mechanics recently returned from a factory conducted school. Prompt Efficient Guaranteed Old, Tower DlCfc B. MHIer CO. 7th 4 Kam,.K I. Mr- Whltlock fcOrl Whlla.1. TT 1 I tl.lll -.-v.un. 4.-U1IV1U1 will commont on "Fath- RADIO REPAIR By Expert Technicians GOOD STOCK OF AVAILABLE TUBES-PARTS-AERIALS For All Makes of Radiol ZEMAN'S Quick, Guaranteed Service 116 N. 9th Phone 7522 Aorosi From Montgomery Ward on North Sth "' " 1111 " 1 a rrrrnrriiiimji"iiiup ! -'' ' , ;. :: ; .''.;"'r .S ; "WEALTH OFrTHrWESTll If-' V" ' . 'Trll ill H l' l? r- v. , . - ' 5 -V f Ifc rf a t' ' t& I : r : ' ' :i ," :- fllfl f bjf '' ; i m - -. - ; -. '. 1 -.'v ; - ' it r 3l :fil , v , s x , . . . , ' X S t ri 5 ys , i : " S 5 ' - ' , ' . v - " liU i 1 1 h p. Hi k : W " " ' ' 'n ' armers Attention! We Icif I, dross and chill your hogs 'Ac per pound. W cure and smoke your ham and bacon 5c per pound. We have the best facilities. Our work is guoron feed. WHY PAY MORE? Among Ih'e resouzcesi oi lite West none It held in hlghac esleem by Us people them their educational lnatfluttona. There haa been Inherent In Westerners a deep regard for both the practical cad cultural values of higher learning. From the Institutions of the West graduate In engineering, agriculture, mining, fishing, forestry, chemistry, and other sciences, hare made Important and far-reaching contributions to the utilisation ol the natural resources of this area to the enrichment oi all mankind. At the same time, regard for the Immediately prac : deal has been coupled with tho realisation that man does not live by bread alone and our liberal arts colleges have produced scholars, writers, artists, and musicians oi world-wide distinction. In counting Its assets, this West puts highest value upon its young men and young women. SICKS' BREWING COMPANY ULEM, OREGON frSmD THE VICTORY BUY WAR BONDS : PART AND PARCH OF THE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE GREAT STATE OF. OllflSOfl PACKING CO. iiJOME OF QUALITY MEATS PHONE 5323