4
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EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS
Monday-June IB. 194S
1 0 HOMES
ill
OCCUPIED
HOUSING UNIT
tttt.jtt. ATf W Tpn modern
homes which are being built here
under a government approveu
unit building program are either
now occupied or about ready lor
occupancy. The buildings, all
with individual iioor piaus v
suit the owners, are equipped
with themostatically controlled
oil furnaces have steel reinforced
concrete foundations, new type
corner windows, hardwood
floors, cooler rooms and other
modern conveniences. E. W.
Barnum, Dunsmuir is the con
tractor and Ben Barham is the
Interior decorator.
Only one of the group, locat
ed on street Deiween na
3rd is for rent This one bed
room home is being put up by
Barham on property he recently
purchased from Mrs. Jo Nichols.
Those already occupied are
owned by Don Potter of the John
Deere Implement company, by
his assistant Phillip Parks, the
Ward McCulley family, by Mr.
and Mrs. Emil Bailey and by Mr.
vvtt Knrntit. Mo-
auu ..---
Culley and Bailey are farmers
and Sprout is empioyea Dy uie
reclamation.
over the residential areas of
town, some lacing me city pam
location. All have various types
of wall insulation, some of spun
glass, and new type silent win
dows. One of the larger houses which
..ill Kn flnichot own will VtP op.
supied by Mr. and Mrs. Don
wooiery. wooiery is owwner
with Charles Bragg of the New
nnnoiuslt at Hatfield. This is a
two bedroom home with living
room, dinnette, Kiicnen, Dam,
cooler room and service porch.
Of this same type is the home
to be used by Mr. and Mrs.
Charles K. Wiese. This home is
built on a lot purchased some
years ago where large trees al
ready afford shade.
The Claud Metz home is the
only one with a fireplace built
of native rock. Metz is associ
ated with Metz Brothers Welding
and his home is located on 4th
street near his business location.
The duplex on First street is
owned by Mrs. R. R. Woodman
of the Tulelake 5 and 10 cent
store. These units which are
about completed have living
room, two bedrooms, kitchen and
bath. V
. One other foundation has been
completed.
Approximate cost of the homes
is $6000.
: PORTLAND, Ore., June 18
VP) The director of defense
transDortation warned civilians
here not to expect Pullman ac-
. commodations alter August.
: Col. J. Monroe Johnson said
the army would begin a 10
month long shift of power from
the Atlantic to the Pacific at
that time, jamming Pacific coast
iransporiauon lacuiues iu uie
last upper.
. Johnson said the Portland
Vancouver railyards and dock
areas are already "uncomfort
ably full" but will have to
handle three times as much
cargo in future months.
40,000 Attend Oregon
Shipyard Open House
PORTLAND, June 18 (IP)
Forty thousand people jammed
through the gates of Oregon
Shipbuilding corporation yard
here yesterday when the record
breaking shipyard held its first
open house since Jfcarl Harbor.
The crowd j2d through
previously resylcted areas,
climbed aboard two Victory
ships - to peer down cargo
hatches and file through narrow
companionways, and then wit
nessed the launching of the SS
Drew Victory.
Portland Retailers
Short Of Meat
PORTLAND, Ore., June 18
(P) Half of Portland area meat
retailers are getting only 40 per
cent of the meat needed to re
deem red points held by custom
ers, a meat dealers' association
officer declared today.
A survey by the Independent
Retail Meat Dealers' association
rennrtpi nhmif 3n not. ...
markets can supply 50 to 60 per
cent of their customers' require
ments while possibly 20 per
cent, can iurnisn io per cent.
Flashes of
Life
PERSUASION
SALT LAKE CITY. June 18
(IP) It sometimes takes a lot
of argument before a cabby gets
his money.
Cab Driver Kay Lomax need
ed all his experience to talk a
would-be holdup man into re
turning $24 of the $34 the other
had taken at tne point or. a gun
Not so glib was a passenger
who was relieved of $35.
CAMOUFLAGE
COEUR D'ALENE. Idaho,
June 18 (P) A two-hour search
by sheriffs for tne missing zs-vear-old
son of Mrs. Julia
Emchiser ended when his grand-
mnlhpr found him curled up in
the blankets at the foot of his
bed asleep.
COMPANY
MILES CITY, Mont., June 18
iP) Mrs. Gladys Wilson not in
to her water-filled bathtub. She
whizzed right out.
Her nine-year-old son had de
Dosited a live, 18-inch catfish
in the tub.
PROFIT
SPOKANE. June 18 (VP)
R. H. Hunt of Warehouse Point,
Conn., said he went to Henry J.
Kaiser's Swan island ship yard
to get some of those "big wages."
He earned $15.20 for two days'
work at the end of a week.
His week's board was $14.02.
The federal witholding tax was
$1. Other tax deductions totaled
17 cents.
Hunt says he won't cash the
one-cent check he received. It
would cost too much.
1 BOND SALES
MALIN Malin, with a 7th
War Loan quota of $80,000 has
eone over the top, first of the
communities in the southern sec
tion of the county to report.
With several days of the drive
yet ahead, the committee, com
posed entirely oi women witn
Mrs. W. C. Dalton as chairman,
hODes to add substantially to the
quota. Any bonds purchased be
fore the end ot June wiu count
in the final tally.
As a climax to the drive, a
bond premiere show is sched
uled for the night of June 29 in
the Broadway theatre, at which
time the marine show, previous
ly presented in Klamath Falls
and other towns will be featured
here. Tickets will be issued on
purchase of bonds of $100 de
nomination or over. - A chil
dren's band show was given re
cently at the same theatre, tick
ets hinging on purchase of a $Z5
or $50 bond.
All bonds were sold in the
campaign by direct contact, and
there has been no community
rally.
Women who. have assisted on
the committee will be entertain
ed at dinner in honor of the
speedy accomplishment of their
goal, by memoers of the cham
ber of commerce who are hus
bands of the committee women,
Mrs. Dalton was assisted by
Mrs. Emil Tofell, Mrs. Florence
DeMerritt, Mrs. J. Perry Haley.
Mrs. Dick Henzel, Mrs. Louis
Kalina, Mrs. Frank Payer, Mrs,
Lester B. Schreiner, . Mrs. John
Reber, Mrs. James Ottoman,
Mrs. Emma Morelock, Mrs.
Irene Jelinek and Mrs. Ray Van
Meter, Mrs. Martha Brothanek
and Mrs. Edwin Stastney.
Riley To Protest On
Housing Okay Delay
PORTLAND. June 18 (IP)
Mayor Earl Riley promises to
join Home Builders' association
protests that approval of 500
housing properties has been de
layed too long by national authorities.
Riley said return of veterans
and relaxing of certain war
work here has made available
labor to build the homes needed
for veterans and essential
workers.
All Leather
WORK GLOVES
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
800 Main
SUMMER SCOUT
CAMP SCHEDULED
TULELAKE Boy Scouts of
Tulelake troop 44, sponsored by
the Tulelake post, American
Legion, No. 164, are looking
forward to summer camp to be
held at Crescent lake the second
week in July. In preparation
for that outing and one which
will follow after the boys are
hardened, the troop met Wed
nesday pight in the Legion hall.
Scoutmaster Phillip Park pre
sided. All boys who attend the sum
mer camp must have passed the
tenderfoot examination.
Following this outing the
boys will hike to Medicine lake,
making Indian wells in the lava
beds the first night. Equipment
will go in largely by truck.
A demonstration of tying
trout flies was on the program
Wednesday night and a number
of the troop attended the Ciro
O-Ree in Klamath Falls, bring
ing home an A rating for
camp perfection and several
other awards, including the
Gen. Eisenhower award for
waste paper salvage.
Bob Laird is senior patrol
leader and leaders of the other
patrols follow: Dan Beard,
Charles K. Wiese Jr., Lion,
Malcolm Crawford: Hawk, Tom
Harkness; Moose. Ronald Pence.
Scoutmaster Park succeeds
Rev. Hugh L. Bronson.
FARM ACREAGE IN
3
SALEM, June 18 (IP) Farm
acreage in Wasco, Crook and
Columbia counties has increased
over the 1940 total, but the
Multnomah county total is
down, the bureau of the census
said today.
preliminary figures tor tne
1945 agricultural census show
Multnomah county has 2391
farms totaling 78,599 acres,
compared with 2260 farms total
ing 79,770 acres five years ago.
Wasco county has 852 farms
totaling 885,310 acres, while in
1940 there were 1007 farms to
taling 875,843 acres.
Crook county has 473 farms
totaling 825,651 acres, the 1940
figure having been 495 farms
and 817,898 acres.
Columbia county has 2101
farms totaling 160,834 acres.
The 1940 total was 2060 farms
and 138,085 acres.
Classified Ads Bring Results
Hitler's Decisions Lost
War, Believes Goerfig
By GEORGE TUCKER
TWLLKTH ARMY GROUP
HEADQUARTERS, Germs ny,
June 18 (P) American interro
gation officers said today Kclchs
marshal Hermann Goerlng had
told them that:
Hitler gave the Japanese the
German blueprints for a Jet fight
er, and these plans were taken
to Japan by submarine;
Germany once planned to oc
cupy Iceland the Azores;
He himself had unsuccessfully
urged Hitler to seize Gibraltar;
Allied air power assured the
success of the invasion, and he
was "stunned" by the perform
ance of U. S. long-range fighters:
Hitler ordered tho "perfect"
German let fighter converted in
to a bomber and "in your aerlul
warfare you had a great ally
in the fuehrer" because of Hit
ler's decisions.
In the interrogations, which
SACRAMENTO, June 18 (IP)
The legislative mill continued
to grind today more than 36
hours aftertofficlul adjournment
time and it appeared probable
the 56th session would not com
plete its work until the early
hours of tomorrow.
Having stopped their clocks,
the members of the two houses
labored without the $10 dally ex
pense compensation which
ceased at 3 p. m. Saturday. Ex
hausted also was the regular
salary allocation.
Principal results- of a daytime
and night Sunday session were:
The two houses composed
their differences over the make
up of an un-American activities
investigating committee and
agreed to have four senators and
four assemblymen conduct the
$20,000 joint interim investiga
tion. The assembly created a $50,
000 health insurance study com
mittee to parallel the interim
inquiry on the subject voted by
the senate with a $20,000 ap
propriation. The senate' approved a pro
posed constitutional amendment
to allow the legislature to pass
laws governing state loans to
veterans for small businesses and
tools.
The senate approved a series
of bills providing a total of
$954,000 for care, education, and
treatment of children, afflicted
with cerebral palsy, or so-called
spastic ailments. .
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
FRESHNESS. ..WHEN IT'S
NOTICE!
SECOND-OR
NIGHT ELECTION
BOARDS
Because a light ' yote
usually is cast at a
Special Election
On June 22nd
All Second or Night.
Election Boards will
not begin counting
ballots until
8 O'CLOCK P. M. ' '
Chai. F. DoLap, -'
County Clerk.
''Vasty
and
silky-smooth as befits
a great Kentucky whiskey
Old Hermitage come of thoroughbred
stock a supremely smooth and delicious
whiskey an asset to your cellar, a favor
ite with your guests! If you haven't been
' able to get Old Hermitage recently, you
may have better lucknow. Ask for it today.
0.LDap
IIS.
MM KTUBS HBCXTt UIHIIIM, ITW 1M
m woa-A KM'tsi mrx tun tarn mat
BUY BIGGER BONDS
forjheBIGJtjl
produced moro opinions than
solid facta from Goerlng, tho one
time powerful nuzl expressed dis
belief that Itussln could afford
to enter then war against dnpim
without endangering her post
war economic position, the of
ficers said.
As for the jet fighter whose
blueprints were given to the Jap
anese, Goerlng said "there Is a
big difference between looking
at a blueprint and bolng able to
do anything with it."
Goerlng was quoted as saying
these factors led to Germany's
defeat: Hitler's Ignorance of the
uses of airpowcr; the unreliabil
ity of the Italians in the Mediter
ranean; tho destructive force of
U. S. long-range heavy bombers,
and tho overall supremacy In
European waters of tho British
homo fleet.
Goerlng said the Germans
failed to invade Britain aftor the
fall of France because of German
n a v y's inadequato shipping
space, an Insufficient number of
landing craft and fear ot the
British home fleet, but expressed
belief that an invasion would
have succeeded once a bridge
head had been secured because
tho British did not have enough
bombers at that time.
Goerlng said that early In the
war he saw tho need of taking
Gibraltar by slipping down
through Spain and assaulting
that British bastion from tho
rear. The Spaniards, ho said,
were friendly to the Germans
because the "Germans had saved
them from communism."
Black Market Meat
Dealer Arrested
ASTORIA Ore.. June 18 (IP)
Duniel K. Warren, Warrcnton,"
Ore., today faced a charge of
selling ungraded beef from his
farm to the black market.
Warren was arrested Suturday i
on a secret Indictment by the
federal grand jury, and released i
on property bond.
U. S. Marshall Jack Cauflcld
said a navy patrol saw a car
drive up before an Astoria cafe 1
at midnight and dump two
aua.ters of beef into a cellar;
oor. i
The OPA said the meat was
sold at 25 cents Instead of the
legal 14 cents a pound, and was
neither inspected nor graded.
SEATTLE, June 18 (IP) A
20.yeur-old Ynklma, Wash., girl
who was Interned by tho Jap
anese for three years In Manila
and would therefore "like to see
every one of them dead" enlisted
in the Waves here today.
For her, Patricia Muriel Chit
tick, It seemed the best way to
settle her personal score with tho
enemy.
Thirteen naval district head
quarters officers hero bollovo
she Is the first repatriated Inter
nee to join the Waves. She re
turned to the States Just a month
ago. She applied for the Waves
at Yakimn and was sworn In to
day by Lt. (jg) Barbara Bloom
of Spokane.
Miss Chlttlck was Interned
January 16. 1942, with her moth
er, her brother, Bill, 10, who will
bo Inducted soon, and two
younger sisters. They wero
freed February 3 and finally ar
rived nt Snn Francisco the day
after V-E day.
Union County Cherry
Crop Purchased
LA GRANDE, June 18 (IP)
Paulus Brothers, Salem, have
fiurchascd tho entire cherry crop
n Union county and will truck
tho fruit to Salem for cunning,
tho Pumpkin Rldgo Cooperative
Growers have announced.
The cooperative said the con
tract price Is 131 cents for No.
1 black cherries and 13 cents
for Royal Annes. Tho crop Is
estimated ot 500 tons.
STRAND TO SPEAK
PORTLAND, Juno 18 (P)
Dr. A. L. Strand, president of
Oregon Stuto college, will ad
dress tho 40th animal Oregon
Uankers' association mooting
hero Juno 20.
Dr. Strand will discuss atuto
wide ugrlculturo clovulopnicnt
Rayon
COWBOY SHIRTS
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
800 Main
riurlmr u-ii
. . .. .. tuna .
markets and JroV MJ
WNTION
r AKIYItRS
or your nMI,rt'
""orator.
sqXfflnTkitW til
SKY-GREY
CLUSTER STRIPE
Hard Finish
, WORSTED
SUITS
Full-Drape Models
. Double Breasted
lly
iterkelvy Squire
Slits
S3 to 44
'50
.Since lilt.
EdiiewsJ
MANST0RE
731 Mala It.
Ed Burkholder
Mir. Walls luiuini MaliiUI Dipl.
Ed Says: . ,
If n Mnl It I
Y0U; hom 'U.l
"wp.y nothl J"l
Ml Fill now ,Vb,7
ol y..r 'round c.mY,n"2
your hom.l If,
ht kind ,Z ?
ind io . i. .fn
n do It rouutlfi
Mineral F
Now
Per Big
in
-J.l
Other Good Buys This Week:
nexagon aningies 8qu. y.
W-Lp. Roll Roofing RoU
Screen Door
Screen Door
Single Pinol, 2 ft. t x I It I 4.1S
3 Panel. 2 ft. S x I ft. .... 3.65
Mall this coupon to Wirdi Building Material Dipt
We would like to have a free oitlmiU on tht mitttU
tor tnw ju cnsGHta diidw.
Customer'! Name .
Addrttt
estimator ealt.
Roofing
Shingles
..Date we would like to hm jj
Painting
Siding
3 Imulatlon
IVIontgomery Ward
Don't be a Summertime
CROSS PATCH
Lady, If you must lose your temper, please keep
control of your car. .
But, if a cranky car Is the reason- take time
by the forelock, now!
GO STRAIGHT TO YOUR CAR'S OWN DEALER
He knows your car from stem to stern, every one
. of its thousands of parts.
A Crossed finger Summer Is no Summer of all
He has all the skill, tools end experience, w!
all the spare parts you'll need to keep things fit
as a fiddle.
Let your nearby Plymouth, Dodge, DeSoW
or Chrysler dealer uncross
correct your temper, and
tlsk to advantage.
Carefully Impect cooling system and pump A Check fan belt for weir ind temton
A Examine oil filler ind lir cleaner A Ten brakes Rotate tlrei and maintain oroner
inflation Change to rummer lubricanti Check iteerlng alignment Tune engine for
greatest gas economy Kiipect wiring for cracked or worn Imulatlon Repair denti,
touch up rust ipots, poliih car to preserve finish A Avoid road failures by more frequent
overall inspection.
This tradamork Mantillas MOM, parti
atptrially made for Plymouth, Dodga,
DaSoro and Chryiltr cart, and Dodgo
Jobofad Trucks.
Don't Drive with Your
OKI
ST 1
If
your ng.
turn
torn
Fingors
CHUYSIH CORPORATION
PARTI DIVISION
You'll Enjoy "Tho Muilc of Morton Gould"
Thvndays, 9 f.M., E.W.T, CIS Natwork
PLYMOUTH ' DODGl
DESOTO CHRYSLER
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