Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 10, 1946, Page 4, Image 4

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    ftemlb anbfrto, News
raAKK JfNKINS , MALCOLM JH.KY
r4 oua rliM matte at lhe poniollice ot KlimilB
'i. Or.. Ml Aufuti au, iw unav
I SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Jr wrrttr ..month 91.00 By mail .
null month 1.00 By mH .
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
50ME time ago a Washington editor, writing
for his sheet after a trip through Oregon,
incntioncd Klamath Falls ai a "doomed city."
J The remark, as reported to -
us, was based on the editors
idea that the timber supply
back of local lumber plants
Jias been seriously diminished,
nd he evidently was not fully
iware of the agricultural de
velopment of the area or what
may happen to make the most
of the remaining timber sup
ply. Our reason for mention
no him comment on the fu
ture of the community is that
we have ridden around the area
cently, and we would like to have the Wash
ington writing gent accompany us on just such
U trip.
The way people are building, privately and
Jjublicly, in this district, certainly indicates that
few folks share the gloomy view of Klamath
destinv expressed In the Washington paper.
: ...
.Construction
J A TERRIFIC building program is under way,
running into millions of dollars. Evidence
Jrf this is to be seen on all sides. It Isn't just
confined to highway and other public construc
tion, a sizeable program, indeed but it in
cludes business and industrial structures and a
Surprising number of homes.
J As a matter of fact, the whole thing is amaz
ing, because of the extreme difficulty of carry
ing on such projects in these times.
And it is impressive, because it does show
great faith in the future of this community.
Various basic developments of the recent
period show the justification for that confi
dence. Lumber re-manufacturing is getting
ahead. The big land utilization program in the
area has been given a major boost through
Jboth private aggressiveness and the investiga
tions and plans of the federal reclamation serv
ice. Transportation has advanced through ma
tjor highway construction, the authorization of
Jnain line air service, and progressive plans of
the railways operating through here.
Things are looking up in the Klamath coun
try, despite the hesitant and confused national
deconversion program. ,
...
Recreation Park
SOME 2500 or more persons turned out to see
the baseball game at Recreation park Sun
Jday, more than proving the point of those who
come time ago contended there was ample-inter-st
in baseball here to justify the development
Jf a suitable park.
It will be remembered that after a brief
Argument on the Question, the city recreation
committee went ahead with the park program,
Jiided by financial support from the troop en
tertainment committee and military affairs
fcommittee.
J Considerable volunteer work was done in
Connection with this enterprise, and we want
Jo say. a good word today for the major volun
teer Fred Robinson. Mr. Robinson is a mem
Jber of the recreation committee. He was hand
led the task of supervising the Recreation park
"program.
1 Without remuneration, he has worked for
"weeks on this job. It has taken a great deal of
Jhis time and talent.
He deserves the warm appreciation of the
'community for a remarkable bit of volunteer,
.unpaid public service.
Injured Driver
faces Charges
City police are holding a war
rant charging reckless driving
sgainst Cecil Cullen, 35, of 2225
JJaxden, who is in Hillside hos
pital with severe injuries after
Jiis car crashed into the steel
girders on the right side of the
S. 6th street viaduct about 3:30
Sunday morning.
J Officers investigating the ac
rident reported that Cullen's
J939 Plymouth coupe was mak
ing an estimated 50 miles an
fiour when he pulled onto the
viaduct and smashed into the
Kirdcrs. The car was almost a
total wreck. Cullen was alone
Jn the vehicle.
A witness, Donald Miller of
(Summers lane, who was driving
J.outh on 6th, said he saw Cullen
approach the viaduct from the
south end driving very fast,
Jabout 70 miles an hour, and that
Jvhen the car got on the span it
jwerved to the right and into
the side.
I" Police found a quart whisky
ottle about one-fourth full in
Jhe smashed vehicle and Cul
len, when questioned at the hos
pital, told officers that he had
keen drinking. He works at
t'ulana Farms.
j His injuries included three
MONDAY
.KFLW 1450 kc.
EVE., JUNE
KFJI 1240 kc.
Gabriel Healter MBS
Aronnd Town"
Spotlight Bandi MBS
fcfl:0Lon Ranger ABC
mti.ii
Btt:0 Music of Manhattan
i 4.1 The Jesters
"tit.VI Sports by H. Wlsmer .
i MO Southland Slniing
:3g Malcolm Epley
7:45 Carton fteblion
K:OOLum N' Abner ABC
11:1ft Vincent Lopes
The Fat Man ABC
:M "
Jnoftl Deal In Crime ABO
Vis " "
lt:; News
MuiIp by A rill m ABC
i:Oot-al Tinner ABC
Llmer Davit ABC
faVKO Rovere's Blaea ABC
y nesirn off
TUESDAY A. M., JUNE
I Dawn Patrol
Wake-Un
it arm Fare
9 Newa '
SKtop and Oe Shaw
Uimti Abbe Observes ABC
I eke MennrriARC
ft lire akfail Club ABO
HGlameir Minor ABC
I :in ftkf-t. tn noiKwood arc
M&BkfaU to Hollywood ABU
m vuuiiim,
...f months 4 W
.r MOO
- j; - v .-PJ
EPLEY
quite a bit re
Coming To
broken ribs and hospital at
tendants said that his condition
took a turn for the worse today.
Rocket Blast
Injures Youth
The explosion of a homemade
rocket with which he was tink
ering Sunday afternoon sent
George Lasagna, 18, to Hillside
hospital with serious injuries.
City police who investigated
said that young Lasagna had
apparently made a rocket in a
workshop in the basement of
his home, 2030 White, where he
conducts frequent experiments.
The rocket consisted of pow
der from shotgun shells and
from a railroad fusee in a piece
of pipe.
Lasagna is believed to have
taken the contraption into the
back yard where he set it off,
while he was standing close by.
He was seriously injured by
fragments of metal lodged be
low the abdomen and powder
burns, according to hospital re
ports. His condition today is
considered fair. The merchants
police ambulance took him to
the hospital. He is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. A. Lasagna of 2030
White.
m
RADIO PROGRAMS
10
TUESDAY A.
KFLW 1450 kc.
10:09 Horn Edition Newa ABO
10:15 Words Muile
lo-J Tn,B SUlT AB0
10:33 Betty Croeker ABC
11:00 The Walts I.lvci On
11:18 Fihel and Albert ABO
Listening Post ABC
J 1:45 Nova time
Bulldog Drommond MBS
Ciico Kid MBS . t.
Michael RharneMBS
Lurillr Man ntn A Bay
lleatherten"
Ernest Armstrong, piano
(ilenn lUrdv. Newa MBS
Re Miller MBS
Dance
Henry J. Taylor MHS
News Roundup, Concert
Hall
Muilo As Too Like It
Lawrence Welk Orcb. MBS
Organ Melodies M II S
Newa Roundup MBS
IX:
11:15
12:30
"ii
Man on the Street
Lid ls B Seated ABC
1:00 Jack flerrb ABO
1-IA
1:15
1:30
Hollywood
Hymns ARC
What' Doln
1:15
2:00
X
11
ttiti
t:0
:4ft
8:00
X:3U
S:4ft
Norman NcsblMABO
Jimmy VYakely Trio
Master Singers
Bride and Groom ABO
AI Fearce ARC
Tunes
Morning Reveille
F. Hemingway, Newi MBS
It lie and Khine MBS
Headline Newa'
Beit Rays
Favorites of Yesterday
Fashion Flashes
Newa
Victor . Llndlihr MBS
Lvle Van, News MRS
The Coke Club ARC
Mnrntnr MaHnfe
Klatntlb Theatres
4:00 Riding tbe Rang
4.11 Rimer Davit ARC
4:30 Requestfully Yours
4:4.1 Hop UarrlganABC
5:00 Terry and Plratei ABO
:lfi Dick Tracy ABC
3:30 Jark Armstrong ABC
5:45 Sports t.tneun
KFLW Fcalara
StiUS News
WASHINGTON, June 10 The California
primary result has caused tha most In
timate interpreters of politics there to conclude
CIO-PAC is through in politics in the nation's
fifth largest state. Indeed local CIO managers
there are murmuring they must reorganize and
get a new line.
True enough, they did not lose many candi
dates for democratic nominations to the re
publicans excepting the head of their ticket,
the candidate for governor, but everywhere
they showed such weakness they may even
lose their hold upon their own men. The
head of their ticket, Robert Kenny of Los
Angeles, was not only backed by CIO-PAC with
considerable money (I cannot ascertain the
precise sum), but has been generally described
as "extremely leftwing." The Jimmy Roose-velt-Ickes
organization alto put in energy and
money, including the services of son James
himself, who, I am authoritatively informed,
receives $25,000 a year from this organization
which is promoting leftwing politic among
writers, actors, artists or some such. The
weakness of Kenny's race left politicians with
the conviction that the support he had is defin
itely to be avoided by anyone .with ambition
for California public office.
Indeed, there Immediately developed a
tendency among candidates who won the demo
cratic nomination to sever themselves from
the CIO-PAC and leftwing connections. They
are saying they never agreed with Kenny, and
are strongly anti-CIO. It Is evident they will
have to get away from the mesalliance if they
are to save any of the ticket from the republi
cans in November.
...
L. A. Strike Factor
CLOSE California observers think the final
blow which ruined the CIO line the last
straw if one was needed wis the Los Angeles
strike. Traffic was paralyzed completely for
several days in probably the worst traffic
tie-up of the nation's history. Atop a street
car and bus strike, the national rail strike oc
curred, and none of these was especially popu
lar with the public. People got fighting mad
at this total disregard of their interests and
of their rights, including the right to work,
to subsist and to public service.
The communist support, Russia appeasement,
and such familiar doctrines of CIO-PAC, proved
heavy burdens as did their domestic economic
wage policy, which has now taken a new sensa
tional turn among their auto workers, namely
this: as the wage increase which they forced
in the long strike has been followed by price
increases on autos, UAW has decided to make
demands for additional wage increases to meet
the price increase which, of course, will force
another price increase and require them to get
another wage increase, and how long does this
go on?
Senses
BUT the overshadowing instance ot the result
which ruined CIO-PAC was the way Re
publican Governor Warren pulled a majority
of the democratic votes away from the demo
cratic. CIO ticket. He has been a good gov
ernor, and the democrats just simply would not
stand any longer, for domination by the
Roosevelt-Ickes-CIO-PAC coalition. They left
Governor Warren with only a prohibitionist to
run against in November. They kicked out
their own candidate and took the republican,
the first governor sine Hiram Johnson to be
reelected in California.
When such a thing happens in California, a
state which has been balmy in its politics
of the past (you could at one time get neaily
any kind of a movement started for nearly any
thing from ham and eggs to technocracy and
thirty every Thursday), you may be sure it
bears symptoms of a historic national event
People are coming to their senses. For Cali
fornia, in their primary, they marked the turn
ing of an era.
Degree Given
KF Principal
SOUTHERN OREGON COL
LEGE. June 10 Miss Augusta
Parker, principal of the Joseph
Conger school of Klamath Falls,
was- awarded the bachelor of
science degree at the 20th annual
commencement of the Southern
Oregon College, June 6.
Miss Parker, who has long
been connected with the Klam
ath Falls schools, has been pur
suing college study during sum
mer terms, toward achieving this
degree.
Friends and relatives who
were present at the commence
ment exercises were: Mrs. Mar
guerite Parker, Norman and
Helen Louise Parker, Mrs. E. S.
Veatch, Mrs. Donald Veatch,
Mrs. Mary E. Stewart, Mrs. Cora
Wirtz, R. H. Dunbar, Klamath
Falls; Mrs. Olive Wilson, Mrs.
Ned Holmes, Mrs. Mable Klemm,
Medford; and Mrs. W. L. Ireland,
Portland.
Mrs. W. L. Ireland was pre
sented by President Elmo N.
Stevenson as a representative of
the 1899 class in the earlier in
stitution of what is now the
Southern Oregon college.
Your money buys mere good
insurance from Hans Norland.
123 N. Sth st.
M., JUNE 11
KFJI 1?40 Ice.
Glean Hardy, Nwa MBS
mile Tim MBS
Quaes far ft Day MBS ,
Hawaiian Music
Erne- Bapt Cencert
Roland Smyth Sings
Jerry Wall Orcb.
TUESDAY P. M., JUNE 11
Melodises Msledles
News
Vnr Dance Tsjati
Farai Front
Living with C4
Organ
Johnson Family MBS
Band Concert
Local News
Zek Manners MBS
John . Aathay MBI
Beqatit Hear
naven f Best
OPA
Here's now with Pete
How MBS
Fallon Lewis Jr. MBS
Rem Millar MBS
Klamalh Theatre
Flit Frolics MHS
Story of Iron Hint
Km pernio n MRS
Captain Mldnlt MBS
Tom Ml MRS
KFJI Faalaro
Via ABO
Ladlca ABO
SIDE GLANCES
I 'til Aj-L-v !
"1 won't have lime lo ucl my family much for linnet
but it'll be a nice lliinrf to gave sonic food for the stnrv- .
ina Europeans anvwavl"
I
STATIC
Frank Lovejoy, pictured
above, is one of the steadily em
ployed actors for ABC's My
True Story, Monday through
Friday. Frank is one of the
foremost of our dramatic actors,
and will go far.
There have been plenty of dra
matic shows built around eye
witnesses to murders, but
"Dark Venture'' goes a step
further come Tuesday night.
They back their play with an
ear witness to a crime. The
story starts out with a man mak
ing a telephone call and he's
so absorbed in his doodling that
he dials the wrong number. In
advertently enough he gets
through to a room where a mur
der is being committed. He,
the doodler, becomes involved
and what happens to him fur
nishes the surprise ending for
his story.
Following the example of a
good many Klamathites, we
went up to the Fort Klamath
fish hatchery yesterday, just
to look around more than any
tnlng else. Somewhere in the
world there may be water as
clear as that of Crooked creek
and Fort creek, but the spot will
have to go far to equal it. The
main reservoir at the hatchery,
despite the cloudy sky, was
clear as a crystal and reflected
the patches of blue sky and the
green of the cliff hanging over
it. It may also be added that
there are fish there, the only
one's I've seen in the water all
year despite several efforts.
From the fish hatchery we
drove on up to Fort Klamath
through the Wood River valley.
The valley is as green as ever,
spotted with white-faced cattle
and feathery little clumps of
aspen and willows. The lupine
and Indian paint brush are out
all along the roads from Algoma
on up, giving a bright touch of
color to the hills. Travel on the
road was fairly heavy, with a
great predominance of house
trailers. Not the dinky little
home made kind you used to see
so many of, but big, luxurious
jobs with all the comforts of
home. Looks like the American
Seople are really taking to the
ighways this summer.
With a circus due in town
Wednesday, it's a toss-up as to
who's more excited, the grown
ups or the kids. It's certainly
been many a long year since any
of us had a chance to see the
wild animal acts and eat pea
nuts. Wonder if they'll have a
parade like they used to?
A plant in Groton, Conn.,
where submarines were made,
now will be used for the manu
facture of penicillin and other
drugs. The world gets better!
Britain is suffering from a
greater whiskey shortage than
the U. S. When the host reigns
he doesn't pour.
A bowler is about the only
fellow who doesn't mind getting
the old double cross.
The greatest trouble wilh second-hand
information is that it
usually has been misused.
FIMAIEIWKNESS?
ThU great medicine i famout to
rllere pain, nervous distress and
weak, cranky, 'drriKKed out feeliiiK. '
of auolt daya when due to female
functional monthly dlturbncri.
KM
1 a
Airport Opens
At Lakeview
LAKEVIEW, June 10 The
Lakeview airport is open to the
public.
Following a four-year period
of operation by the navy, the
port was made available to
civilian fliers and the general
public Tuesday, upon receipt by
Mayor Lyle North of official
permission from the navy de
partment to operate the field
under an interim permit. The
field will continue to be oper
ated thus until the lease is
finally terminated with the
navy, which probably will re
quire some time.
The hangar, landing strips,
taxiways and aprons now are
In operation. Local and visiting
fliers can tie down their planes
or avail themselves of the ex
cellent hangar facilities.
Temporary fueling equipment
now Is in use. Servicing and re
pair of planes will be made
available shortly.
Glenn Plato and Dale Wil
liams are co-operators of the
field, representing the city coun
cil. The field is municipally
owned.
According to Williams, lim
ited charter flying service is
now available and a larger ship
soon will be on hand for carry
ing passengers and freight.
Flight training is to begin at
once.
Securing of the operation of
the field culminates a campaign
of many months to get it open
to the public. The aviation com
mittee of the chamber of com
merce and the Lake County Aero
nautic association have assisted
the city council in these efforts.
Alturas Club
O.K.'s By-Laws
ALTURAS, June 10 By-laws
were adopted and articles of in
corporation drawn up by the
Alturas recreational club at a
meeting held here last Friday
night. The articles of incorpora
tion will be sent to the secre
tary of state for approval this
week.
Mrs. Doris Declous was elect
ed president; Harry Plneo, vice
president; Charles Hickerson,
treasurer; Paul Baker, secretary;
Dr. Edward Conwell, Robert
Stein, Norval Moyer and Herald
Weldman were selected as a
board of directors.
The object of the club is to
promote recreational activities
in Alturas and the surrounding
districts. At the present time
plans are being drawn up by an
architect for the erection of a
swimming pool. A site for the
pool has been secured which
contains enough space to add
tennis courts, handball courts j
and other recreational facilities.
Eighty per cent of the match i
output has been reported crip-!
pled by strikes. Borrowing is ,
a baa nami, anywayi
SIX FLAVORS
LISTEN!! n
to the
Westinghouse
Program Mon. thru Fri.
10:15 10:30 a. m.
KFLW 1450 K.C.
Chroma Dinette
Chain 7.45
Choice of Red. Blue or
Black Leatherette Cover
ing, i
H after Furniture
9th and Klamath
BOYLE'S
NOTEBOOK
By HAL BOYLE
GENEVA. June 10 At The
League of Nations, first great ex-
fieriment in international unity,
us come down to 10,000.000
worth of empty buildings sun
tried by a lone, vainglorious
peacock.
ThU white, descried village,
where the Initial bid for world
peace faltered, once was a beau
tiful farm on the edge of Lake
Geneva's shimmering waters.
On this farm were dozens of
peacocks with daziling plumage
and harsh discordant voices.
They walked in spreadtailed
wonder as strange men with
many hammers built a white
stone citadel of peace and co
operation In the pleasant pas
tures. The peacocks gawked from
green hedges as fumuus men
from many lands met to bargain
and palaver and then return to
their own far countries where
other things than world peace
were at issue.
One by one, these peacocks
died some were assassinated
by dogs of careless visitors.
Now only one is left. Peace
Indeed has come back to him.
He. is the only peacock left in
his particular world, and he
doesn't seem to regret it.
Symbol of Defeat
The symbol of defeat which
these empty halls represent
means nothing to him but it
does call to others who walk
through this forlorn world cpl
tnl and think of all the graves
filled by its failure.
Before the second World War
began, thousands of tourists
filed daily through these vast
cnambera and colorful gardens.
They came from every quarter
of the globe.
Some 300 visitors dally still
walk along the empty corridors,
but It Is as If they trod some
old mausoleum. This once busy
monument to peace has become
to most of them an empty shell
of hope and half-hearted ideal
ism. To the cynical, this group of
buildings takes Us place with
the Parthenon, the Colosseum,
the Pyramids and other relics of
history.
Idea Still Lives
But although the League of
Nations Is dead, the idea behind
It is still alive the groping for
peace in this, our lime. The
buildings aro being turned over
to the United Nations to house
international technical commis
sions. I walked through the league's
plaster and marble home with
one of its oldest employes In
point of service Building Su
perintendent Charles Bechtold.
"I have been 28 years wilh
the League of Nations," he said.
"I saw Ita first meeting and Its
last meeting. They began these
buildings in 1029 and finished
them In 1938 so we really had
only three years use out of them
before war broke out again in
1939." .
In the vast, modern assembly
hall where delegates once sifted
world problems, only two things
moved among memorials to
peace two quarrelsome spar
rows fighting over personal re
lations. Spio and Span '
The rubberized floors are still
slick and shiny new. Little
oust has collected in the hun
dreds of offices and ' ornate
committee rooms. For $2,500.
000 spent yearly for upkeep
during the war years It was no
difficult problem to keep the
league's home clean.
Bechtold speaks no sentimen
tal ' obituary for the world
league whose doors he opened
and closed for so many years.
But he feels a curious kinship
with that solitary peacock.
There were 12 when we start
ed building." said the little man
with the brown-gray moustache.
"Now he alone is left and I am
left. And many who were here
working for pence are gone."
He locked the big glass door,
where Woodrow Wilson's peace
is stored.
A New York boy told doctors '
he swallowed 18 marbles, and !
X-rays proved It. He really,
plays for keeps! 1
The first strawberries on the !
London market were five cents 1
each. Likely meaning that the j
raspberries were plentiful.
DINE i
At The Blgn
Of The
RED ROOSTER
Klamath's Finest
614 Klamath Ave.
Open S A. M. to 10 P. M.
LISTEN TO
KFLW's
"TOP TEN
for TONIGHT"
S:45-Sports Lineup
6:00-Lone Ranger, ABC
Is30-Musle of Manhattan
8:53-Wismer Sports, ABC
7tlS-Melodle Fantasy, ABC
7i30-Mao Epley
7i4S Carson Robinson
SiOO-Lum 'n Abner, ABC
Si30-Th Fat Man. ABC
9i30-Nawi
Tha Harali ant Kawa ff
0 jKIXIV ,m Ku
Fitzgerald Declines
School Nomination
LAKEVIEW, June 10 Larry
Fitzgerald, chairman of the
ki-hol board of district No. 7,
whose term expires June 30, has
declined renumliiatluii after
serving the past five years, and
now director for a flve-yenr
term will bo named at the
school election on June 17.
When Lakeview becumo a
first-class school district on
July 1, 1943, the number of di
rectors was Increased from
three to five. Other directors,
none of whose term expire thin
year aro Mrs. Lulu McKrndree,
dork, Lloyd Ogle, Hay Harlan
and Gordon Smith.
Auto Mishaps
Bring Arrests
Kermlt Allison, 21, of route t,
posted $20 ball with city pollen
Saturday night for inadequate
brakes and failure lo yield the
right-of-way alter he was In
volved In a mlivr traffic mtshnp
with a car driven by Kermlt S.
Sheets, 1120 I'lne, at 4th and
I'lne.
After another minor accident,
Nina Sunders, 24, of Los Ange
les, posted $3 bail for having no
operator's license. She was nr
lesled yesterday morning at (II h
and Main where her car was in
volved In a cra.h with a vehicle
driven by Clark E. Abbott of
Bly.
Cornelius Florid, SOS Broad,
posted $15 for having no muf
fler, no operator's lu-ense and
for running a red light; Hex
Samuel Howell, 1001 llnlsey,
riut up $5 for driving without
ights at 10 o'clock last night,
and Mrs. J. T. Perkins pouted $5
ball for a violation of the dog
ordlnnnrc.
Seven drunks, one drunk and
disorderly, one disorderly and
one vagrant appeared In muni
cipal court this morning and
during the weekend eight
drunks, one drunk and disorder,
ly and two persons charged with
disorderly conduct posted ball.
TENNE8SEAN SLATED
PORTLAND, June 10 (-Vl
James M. McCorinark of Ten
nessee, president, Is among
speakers for the National Con
ventlon of Insurance Commis
sioners, which opened here to
day and will last through
Thursday.
While wreiilnif mil Khf Milm.
ney, a Hull, England, woman
found $2400 In a tin box. We've
heard of people having money
to burn.
No one ever cleans up by con
sistently betting on horse races,
says a writer. Not by a long
shot!
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
10 rIN NO U0SriTALU4TIUN
H mt Tin
FrMM alut
DR. L M. MARSHA
IW Oik Ilk aaaalta tlnln Bttf
FAST ACTION RELIEF
TORMENTING GAS PAINS
BURNING EXCESS ACIO
Tahatn lahlaU III twins rallal lultr ill
mor ((cllv.lr Hi eonulna no kahlni
oda '4i no laxatlvaa Ht not haull-rnrm-tnj.
Why Iom aloap. to food it)nrninl,
lor work ttlwn handy 40e trial alia will
prova Tabain'a aafa, quick, Ifactlvt r.
pal. Bujr Tabaln at
CAsTi.r.iitaar Darns AdY' K
i sin roa Datrus
r.vrnonv a naro toii
HAoooNra iiaio co.
ta uai a CO.
LaaSUc Drag Slaraa laarywkara.
Jltr.J'
Curtis Food Market
Quality Meats
GROCERIES
Open Evenings and Sundays
WE FEATURE
LOST RIVER DAIRY PRODUCTS
4707 South Sink t
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g ASTE SH?E POLISH Iff
LIQUID DYANSHINE fim&Mm fx
f bn scares b,ca"T J-J 1
C3J f,".li"a,r.0BavailabU. mSSS
M ON II AT, Jan, IS, 1141, ri, ,,,
Marion PUD
Said Feasible
. SAl.DM, Juno 10 (II Th
sluto hydroelectric coinmlsalun
indicated today that the pro.
posed Marlon County I'runi,,
Utility ilinlrict Is frnslbln, ,u
said definite fuels on whethrr
the district could reduce rules
could ho determined only alter
Ilia value of existing eleclrig
properties Is determined.
The proposed rilstrlrl, which
dues not include Salem, com.
prises 842 squnro miles In t,,
western pari of llio county, in.
eludes 70 pT cenl of I U
county's area and A4 tier rent
of Its imputation, Including unci)
cities u Aurora, Jefferum, Mt
Angel, St. I'util, Sllverluu, Ktuy!
ton and Woudliuru.
Tha iHipulntlon of the pro.
poiied district Is estimated t
4S.IKIB mill Its nSM'used Vuluu
lion $27,203,0118. The dlntricl
now Is served by llm Portluml
Gcnerul Electric Co., which has
210,434 customers in the cli.
triii, and (lie Mountain stutr.
Power Co., with lull custuint-ia
in the southern rl of iiir
county.
The eitinuitcd value of extnt.
Inn electrical properties within
the dlntricl Is $2,038,1147, hut
this (Iguro Is Hie actual plant
Investment and not the true
valua.
The district's etlmalrd an
nual revenues would be $707 .
000 and co.Iji $472,000. lt-uvi,,
$233,0110 available anmiully (or
debt service and depreciation
reserve.
The $233,000 annually would
be sufficient lo pay, on a 3',
per rent Intereat bails, rnoiiuli
to amortize $3,130,000 In 30
years.
Tha commission suld It Is not
now known how much of thr
prrnrnt system would be recon
structed, and the reconstruction
cost would liuve lo ba Included
in the indebtedness.
CARD OF THANKS
We wlh la expreaa our heart,
felt thanks and appreciation lor
tha acts of kiiidnru. the mrv
Mgea itl -iiiatliy and the beau
tiful floral offerings during our
recent bereavement.
MHS. LlKM.A B. MO AH.
HILLY MOAK
RUTH MOAK
MRS. SALLY MOAK
AND FAMILY.
Venation Blinds
Patterson Furniture
230 Main
Estate Costs
can wrack what has taken
Itfallme to build. Pro-
I vide for this shrinkage
through an assured estate
survey.
AT
your
SERVICE
JOHN H.
I HOUSTON
IatrarscNTtNo ma
EQUITABLE LIFE I
A......... .I-t
LH.. rark
114 H. Ilk ffc.aa Ittl I
You con charge, it
""B Phone
$1 7130
21 Metal
?! Wood
llii
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