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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1945)
VFW Matting I'ullciin l'oul VKW will hold Us regular niDclliiii on Thursday, August II). In Ihu KC hull lit U . m. All ineinbiMs ui'O iiiii'Ui(l lo ho on tlmu as there will bo liiltlntlnii hikI u short business mudlng will (olluw. After thin tlio post Will KIM'VII lOftl'JilllMCIltH to nil PI'I'SCIll 1111(1 IllUlllbcl'S Of 4tllU Indies' mixl limy. Visiting iiii'in liers mo welcome. Leave Today Three boy, who huvn Hindu application for .acrvtco In Ihu U. h. navy, luavu today for Portland to bu enlisted, and will go from there to boot camp in Han UH'Ko. iney iiru: Ktigeno Clurrcl rvlalchclt, Khun nth Falls; Virgil Dclinon llarchus, Tulelake; ThonniH For lest IliH'aon, Lukolew. Visiting Hot. Mr. and Mm. Stewart Grocsbeck and two Mtuill daughters, Joan and Juan, lira guesln (rum Eugene nl tin: bonut of hi parents, Mr. and Mrs. It. C. liroeitbeck. Stewart In nn jinn Int ii ii t engineer In tlio i in vii I reserve mid In on k'live un til August 27. V-J Birthday Prime! Drown celebrated her fourth birthday on V-J Day with two caked, iMioiilng four candle each. runcl served lea cream with tlio eako to nlnu of her llltln frlonds. Shu in tlio dauiihtor of I'vl. uud Mm. Krunciri iirown. Iter father la on Okinawa Inland. In Virginia Captain J rate Cohen, ol bonanza, has arrived In Ihu United Stales from Ku lone and la now at McCIulra Cien- ei nl hospital ul Hlchmond, Vn., where Im will uiulcrgo mi opera tion. Ilia wife mid baby diulghtcr have left for Virginia to bo with him. Rtplicet Lookout Dill Thorpe, of Klamath Kails, hna been assigned to mun the U. ii, forest service flro lookout on Brown mountiiln, to rcnlnec Eu Bene Pyeall who resigned to work mi lunoror at Rocky Point camp. . ; . . V-j Baby T8 and Mra. Alex ander Lull became parents of a boy on Annual 14 at the Klam ath Valley hospital. Luft la on Okinawa with army forces. Mra. I. lift Ii the daughter of Mrs. Nina W, Currier, 112 South 11th street. To Mot The auxiliary of the VFW will meel In the amall club room at the city library Thursday, August 16, at B p. m. Following the business meeting. member will bo luncheon (jurats of the rcllcon post. From Portland Audrey Mc- Coy, of Portland Is visiting with her brother nnd sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. McCoy, in i Klamath Falls. Grass Fire i-Thu fire depart ment was caned out Tuesday eve nine at about 10:30 to put out a small grass fire at Richmond and East Main. Matting Postponed The meeting of volunteer staff of the USO travelers' aid has been postponed from August 16 at 8 p. m. to August 22 at 8 p. m. ' Take Over USO The Junior chamber of commerce will be In charge of the USO club Sunday, August 10. Don Drulincr will be chairman of tho day. At Coast Mr. and Mrs. John Rich aro vacationing at the coast. Tho aloe plant, used today for treatment of X-ray burns, was once used for Its medicinal prop erties by American Indians. Amy- 8UPRIMI PERMANENT FOR ONLY 'Ml rls iay:::Try Rich kit eonuloi S full ouncfi of aalon-lvpa lolu linn with Kurllum, 60 Curl rj, 611 End Tluuei, Appli cator, Nmurallier aad Complfle Iniuuctloni. Toi COMFLITI HQMI KIT 91a IUI 14 TAX Waggoner Drug, Currin'i for Drugs, Lea Hendricks ' Drug, Super Cut Rata To llano Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Wymiin, of Scuttle, who are guests at tho Wt-nO'inn hotel, are leaving un n trip to Bono whnro they plan to meet friends mid bring them back to Klam ath Fulls. Back on Desk Naomi Dean, recently returned from a month's visit In Seattle, Is helping on tho desk at the Wl-ne-mu hntel dur ing Mrs. Anno Moaon's vacation. Miss Deun was formerly em ployed nt tho hotel. Lumbar Man Hr Irving Kesterson, mill owner, arrived from San Francisco today to meet with M. A. Wyman, L. McLcllan, mid II. J. O'Donnell, who leased the Kesterson Box company July 1. Regular Meeting Tho regular Wednesday testimonial meeting will bo held at the First Church of Christ. Scientist nt II p. m. There will bn testimonies and remarks appropriate, for tho oc casion, From fcait Mrs. Winifred Darnell Smith has returned to her homo In Caslcllu, Calif., from Florida where alio visited her son-in-law and daughter, LI. and Mrs. Chct Robertson. Return Home Mrs. Ruth Eathiany has rotumed to her homo on tho coast after visiting friends here. Martha McCollum, SOS Jefferson, returned with her for a visit. From Medlord Mr. nnd Mrs. Earl A. Gardner, formerly of Klamath Falls, have been visit ing hero from Mcdford where they oro now making their home. At Cabin Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peyton and sons, Dale and Gene, are vacationing at their . cabin . at . Lake . o'.. the Woods. On Business Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller, frequent business visitors from Porllnnd, are In Klamath Falls, staying at the wi-ne-ma hotel. Returns Homo Mrs. Alice M. King has returned to her home in Freano after visiting her daughter, Mrs. Henry Conradi, 2520 Homcdale. To Tillamook Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hnrnden. 2437 Applcgatc, are visiting relatives In Tilla mook over the V-J holidays. Chamber Studies Aviation Brief The aviation committee of the chamber of commerce and the Klamath Falls nlrport commis sion met Monday to consider the rough draft of tlio aviation brief which will bo sent to the civil aeronautics board in an effort to get airline service through Klamath Falls. Additions and corrections were mode on the brief and, after a second and final draft Is made, It will be sent to the CAB. the airlines. and other communities who are concerned. NOTICE TO FARMERS Insure your growing grain and hay now! Si or phone Hans noriana, ua norm in St. Phone 8060. ' J(r '"unburn THIS GLAMOROUS COLD WAVE tt Ml MX of Homo In 2 to 3 Hourt The new Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave home kit gives you a COLD WAVB at home which compares with any professional COLD WAVE costing up to $19.00. It's heatless machlnclcss takes orily 2 to "3 hours, yet your lovely, natural looking and waves will "stay in" for months and months. Ideal, too; for children's hair and so economical; supreme; nnn i i and All Drug Stores n i s. rO FINAL TRAINING Pvt. Andrew E. Sloan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Earl Sloan, 813 Walnut, Is now sta- tloned nt Buffalo, N. Y., where he is taking hlH final training for flight engineer. Pvt. Sloan hopes to be home for a furlough soon after he has completed Ills studies at Buffalo. Ho entered the acrvlce In Jan uary of this year and before that time was employed by the Great Northern railroad. REPORTS SANTA BARBARA, Calif., Aug. 13 Staff Sgt. John M. Martinson, 25, son of Mr. John S. Martinson of 2030 Wantland Ave., Klamath Falls, Ore., has reported to tho array ground and ftr:Jf V.;,;; ;j pair beart 1 Every time your heart beats America uses 837 gallons of gasoline. That's 62,785 gallons per minute, 33 billion gal lons per year. Gasoline in that quantity enough to make a amall river -can't be stored to any extent. It has to flow. If Union Oil had been owned by, say, two men, this system would have cost them $10,400,000 apiece. But since the company is owned by 32,227 people the cost averaged just $645 per stockholder-owner. In this principle of mid ' tiple ownership you have one secret of America's indus ,triai might union ode. Of CAIIF - service forces redistribution sta tion here for assignment to new duties bated on skills and ex perience gained during 21 months' duty as on Infantry rifleman In the Aleutian, Kwu- Juleln, and Philippine Islands. . DISCHARGED Sgt. Leo M. Case of routo 2, box 0(10. Klamath Kalis, recent ly received his honorable dis charge from the army nt Barnes General hONpltal, Vancouver, Waah, Ho has served three years and five months, two years and ten months of which he served over seas as a squad lender in tho in fantry. For meritorious service ho has been awarded tho Asiatic Pacific Ribbon with three battle partic ipation Stars, the Philippine Lib eration Ribbon, the Purple Heart, the Combat Infantryman badge, a Distinguished Unit Cita tion for the Idiot infantry and the Good Conduct Ribbon. His mother, Mrs. Ethel Duran, resides at the Klamath Falls ad dress. GRADUATES Among those graduating re cently from an Intensive course of basic engineering training at service schools here was Grant K. Brown, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred G. Brown, Crystal route, Fort Klamath. His training has been designed to fit him for a specialized navy Job In tho long Pacific war ahead, unci also for skilled work In Industry when peace comes. Graduates from the ten cours es taught here at the service schools are sent to sea, to shore stations, or to advanced schools for further duly. PROMOTED Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Puckett of Klamath Falls, have received word that their son, Kenneth Puckett, has been promoted from seaman 1c to storekeeper 3c with the navy. Puckett Is aboard the USS Paslg In the Pacific. He has been overseas for tho pest six months nod Is a graduate of KUHS with tho class of 1044. Before enter ing the navy, he was employed by the Lorenz company. DISCHARGED PFC Noah ii. Weaver, on of N. II. Weovcr of route 1, box lOfll), has recently been honor- f - -,, ) ' "." ft' I -" miriiiifi poiy aisenargea from tne army having served in Africa, Sicily, Italy, France and Germany. He was also a member of the group which took Casa Blanca and which stood parade during President Roosevelt's trip to Africa. Weaver was an Infantryman machine gunner in the 7th army under General Patch. Among tho decorations he earned were the Presidential Unit Citation, the Good Conduct medal and two French decora tions. He received no wounds at all during his three years and 10 months in the service. 2 That means the stream must be kept moving con stantly - from oil wells to refinery to substation to service station to you. This takes tank ships, tank cars and trucks. But most important of all, it takes pipe lines - thousands of miles of them. 9 If our heavy industries had to be financed by the few people who could put up $10,000,000, progress would be pretty slow. But by pooling the money and the talents of a lot of people we've been able to accomplish tasks collectively that we could never have handled alone. eoivjpnnv 0RUIA Aircraft Plants See No Cutback Yet SEATTLE, Aug. ,19 m No Immediate heavy cutback in employment is contemplated at plants of Boeing Aircraft com pany because of V-J Day, com pany officials said last night. Postwar orders for continued work of an advanced model B 20 Superfortress at a reduced monthly rate will koop workers on the Job for two -months, dur ing which time employment will be reduced gradually, the com pany announced. Work now sub-contracted will be done at main Boeing plants. YOU DONT NEED CASH AT Seart-USC PURCHASE COUPONS Too r to th Cre4tt Offlrt just one to get ft book full of cautions . . . then too, pent! the coupon i Jmt like eah ill through the ftorit. There' bo fun or forraU tty, do riffling Mlet iltpi, SnaJI down piyraeat tod monthly repayment, dual arrjlof cbtrga. GET YOURS TODAY AT Your SEARS CREDIT Office Wednesday. Aug. IB, 1945 DREAD IS TEXTURE, 3 Now these pipe lines cost money. At Union Oil, for example, we have 1100 miles of line through which we pump more than 7 million gallons of gasoline and oil every day. These" lines with their 35 pumping stations and dozens of storage tanks cost $20,800,000 to install. 6 Of course, these big jobs could have been financed1 by assessing all the people through government ownership. But we Americans do it under voluntary legal agreement known as corporations. For in that way we can preserve the efficiency of a free economy, freedom of the individual and that all-important human incentive competition. This series, sponsored by the people of Union Oil Company, is dedicated tit adiscussion of how and why American business functions. We hope you'll feel free to send in any suggestions or criticism you have to offer. Write: The President, Union Oil Co., Union Oil Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Caltf. AMERICA'S PI'TH f Rl I D O M 1 1 t R 1 1 ;;l N 1 1 R P R I HERALD AND NEWS THREK AT ITS BEST , Wffff IT'S