HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON
PACE THRE1
V
SATURDAY, JAN, 17, 1948
Chest Keeps
S4416 Fund
In Reserve
Klamath full illy Community
4'hrnt linn a rrirrve f MIIII.21 a a
nmt-riK fur llr future, II In nIhiwii
In f I it I xriiirU cm the Client tl
nulUTH atllillllltrd l Dip hounl of
director IliU wrrk hy Itulll NrUmi,
caniiiilii arcrrlary mill Hiiilllnr.
The rrni'rvn fund 1 1 icl 1 11 1 i-n mill) 411
which wim broiiKlil fnrwuid limn
IIMIt, iliM I ho Hiiipliin ri'MillliiK f l ii il
0' r-Miilit'rlptton nf thn IIM7 ciim
linlun. The lioiml vnlnl to put I III"
money In i rni'i vii nil Hit IIiiiii to
illntrlliiilo It to piirllilpiitlliu linen
ilc. In kri-plnii Willi the policy pre
rnlcd In the riiiiipiilun.
'lhn IIH7 niinpulitn Kiml wn np
pioxlriatrly $11111100, hut thn tuliil
rained In ruflh mid pli-iliti rcac-hcd
inil. 142 Tlio plrdiira niniiuiit In only
.'330.78.
llUlrlliiillini
Here In thn way lhn fuml wa dl
trlhutnd to nuniu-lrn:
Hoy Hcotil $13. MAM)
Camp I'lrn Cllil II.O2MI0
Olrl Brouta 8 .H 7ft
Hiilvntloii Army i:iIWM0
YMOA H 11711 20
Htale nKniicInt . 10.012 00
I 'Hniimlm nuiirimr. IiicIikIIiik
rnfraaliiniil illrrrlliin, payroll, nip
(illnt. ii.lrr. ntn., totaled IIHIM.M,
under lhn liudcntril nmiilint nf
HMO. Tim campaign worker. In
cluding ru.rllalrinrn, dlvUlon llrail.
captain, coinmlltrrmi-n, elc. lave
Voluntary irrvlrn without pay.
Thn calllmlf-ll rrnolK, Willi Roil!
liven flrnt nml amount ratucd cc
ond: Commercial-Union and im(M.
tndiitrll-$17.o:w mid $17.41(1.
Public Bcrvlre-$I4.0M) and $14.
$41. Oovrrnmrnt rinplnym, firh-MIi.
tale, (rdnrul, county, etc.) Ill 100
mid nun 60
Bunlnt'iui ilrnn thiin 5 employe)
$7400 mid 1700(1
- Itnaldnntinl-14000 nil (I 14100 75.
County-!0O0 mid 112 710 SS.
llnrn U thn community break
down on rnunty contribution:
,' Neatly Itixlro I 35 00
; Illy IIWIU4
'. Hiiiinnm 7IR9A
; Chllomiln 9HS0
- Ollihrlnl 500 00
I Fort Klniiinlh 4M
Henley 9 Slfl 75
- Knno 710 00
Klnmnth Asenrjr 44 50
- Mitlln 3.440 73
, Merrill 3.93ft SO
, Mldlitnd 14500
Legion Groups Hold Conference
g ' M 'r
1 r
not so cully dnUirmlncd beciiuue,
since all obnerveri did not caUh
MKht of It at the aume limtnnt, the
appearance llnei of alKlH a" not
come no nearly meetln at a point
an the "dlnnppearance" linn. Hut
line of lKht for direction "flrt
linen" furnlnhed from fJrnKon ob
nerver at Portland, Uiifur, Kuirene,
North Hend, Olnndale and Khun
ath Fall the attorney reportlnK
here aold It tarted "rlnht at the
North Ktar") converee quite well
tjward the Three Blnterii area In
Lthe Caacadcii.
A line drawn from the Three 8I
ter to the dlnappenrnnce ImRllty
north of Yakima Hive the "itround
path" of the fireball. With thin
determined, the heliht at the bc
Klnnln and endlim of the lumlnouii
flluht are calculated by trlKonome
try from the annle of elevation
(with llKht correction for the
earth' curvature) and the frround
dlntance to thce point. Thl cal
culation how that the Yakima
meteor became vlnlble at about 85
mile above the Three Sinter, went
downward at the (tentle lope of 15
degrees, and, after traveling over
220 mile of "urround path" In l
necond. disappeared north of Yak
ima at a helKht of about 10 mile.
Any unburned fragment likely
went on 20 or 30 mile farther.
Itniirrarnlallve of all the American I.mlon pol in till dlitrlrl, No. 4, met for an annual conference
at the Velrrmi Mrmorlul liall Wrdnnlay. Amom head of the lotion and auilllary who took part In
the dinner merlin rllmaxln tlie cuiifrreiire were, from left. Jack Marl of Canyonvllle, Legion com
mander for lhn department of Oregon; Mr. Hal Ogle, president of Hie Klamath auxiliary unit; Lynn
Itiiyrrnft, romiimndrr of the KUinalh l-rglun poil, and Mr, l.ralg Coynrr of Hend, president or the auilll
ary of the department of Orrgon. Ken K, Frey,
Tracing Meteors By Reports
Of Witnesses Trying Game
Ity J. lll'GII I'HI KTT
Parifln lllrertnr, American
Mrlrnr Horlrly
Rriuet by the American Melcor
society fur report from eyo wll
nnsne of the flight of noma huge
fireball In order that It might be
"traced." may seem U some as an
attempt at the Impossible. CJulle
often 100 or moro letter will oon
bn received from widely eparated
liicnlllle. These "first lettnrs" rare
ly give much usable lufiirmntlon,
but when quesllonnnlre are sent to
the writers, a great many of their
"second letters" give estimated
sometime measured angle of di
rection and altitude which enable
the tracer to calculate many tiling
about the fireball.
11 u Illustrate with the Yakima
meteor at 8:45 p. m. April 20, 1033.
seen from most of Oregon and
Washington. A Portland observer
first saw It 23 degrees east of south
at an altitude of 35 degrees, and last
saw it due northeast 3'i degrees
high. Thin told only that It wo
traveling northerly over a line
somewhat east of Portland, but
fiuin this alone It flight path could
not be determined. From Bedro
Woolley, Wash., It exploded and dls
apjieured In the southeast; from Se
attle, 00 degrees east of south (at 5
degree above the horizon); from
Pasco, Wash., 55 degree west of
north at 77 degrees! ; from Moni
tor, Wash., due south (at 12 de
gree); and from Cove, Ore., due
northwest.
Many other place furnished val-
ULble angular estimate and meas
urements, but these alone determine
quite well over what locality the
big meteor "blinked out." If on a
map lines are drawn from these
various place In the direction In
dicated, they will very nearly meet
at a locality about 35 mile 10 de
gree east of north from Yakima,
the measured direction given by a
Yakima engineer for the disappear
ance. The locality over which th me
teor flashed into luminosity wa
Lakeview PO
Receipts Up
LAKEVIKW, Jan. 17 The volume
of outgoing money orders handled
In 1047 through the Lakeview post
office totaled :;W)01 an In
crease of nearly $62,000 over the
amount sent out In this manner In
1D4IS. It wa announced thl week
by Postmaster Fred Peate.
The 1047 total was accounted for
In 10,400 Individual domestic money
orders, Peate (aid. The 1044 total
wa (318,640.27.
Gross receipt for the office, In
sale of stamps, increased slightly
for the year: $20,072.71 for 1047 with
a 1040 total of J29.574 67. A greater
margin of Increase wa shown In
the figure for December of the two
year; 10.688 10 for that month In
1047 and SB.088.57 for December,
1046.
The true quail la an Old World
bird, but about seventy different
type of the species have adapted
themselves to the western hemisphere.
FOUR-FART DAYS
In Ban Marino, oldest and amall.
est republic In the world, no clock
strike more than six consecutive
times, due to the fact that the day
la divided Into four part of ill
hour each there.
SEWING MACHINE
REPAIRING
Xsptrt Ousrsnt Vvrh
Mil Mshtt)
RMBbU Frleai lallmttM
Sewing Machina Sorvict)
ynr lnadnl lslr
eson. m si is ssi w
"EGO MESSAGES"
Bovlet agent used eggs for send
ing aecret message. Written on
the shell of a boiled egg with a
solution of ugar and alum, mes
sages are Invisible on the shell, but
make a clear Impression on the
solid white Inside.
The term "copper" derive from
"cyprlan mctol," the name given by
prehistoric tribes who mined and
used It on the Island of Cyprus.
For Rent
TRUCKS - PICKUPS - CARS
U-Drive - Move Yourself
Local or Lone Distance, Save !i
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 8304 1201 East .Main
J. L. DEAN
Public Accountant
and Auditor
Ne- Office Location
.'at North 7th 8L
Phone 8346
24 HOUR SERVICE
for
Top Quality Heating Oils
Dependable Check and Fill Service
Larry Goergei
BASIN OIL CO.
1330 Klamath (Former Location M. A M. Market)
Office Phone 6696 Night. Sunday, Holidays Pbone 6043
1 mi nun isi naiiii 1 1 sin 1111 awaM 1 1 1 1 11 11 n insn . mii in 1 ! , 111 j 1 1 1 u 1 1 111 iimwsi 1 rw
if..
j.
New power for your BUICK!
Today's Power, Today's
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Ten Years Old!
M
A Y 111', this sounds too good lo be
true. Iiul it's a fuel I
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fresh l'irehull power a sleek new power
plnnl (lint's llic same ns the ciif(ines
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every drop of fuel give up all its power.
A new dislribiilor.coinpk'lc with vacuum
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ing. A whole new wiring harness pre
vents electrical loss. And tucked in the
flywheel housing is a new smoothie of a
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Yes, it's all new, with the latest liuick
engine features you read about like
precision cylinder boring, Oil-Miser
rings, Stratoflow cooling and so on.
You can get a new engine like this be
cause engine production is not held back
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So we're able 10 put one of these honeys
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give il new power and performance
that will get you set for thousands and
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How much does it cost? Not nearly what
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Nice proposition, isn't it? Surely
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, l:W "7
't v
H. E. HAUGER
1330 Moin
'24 Years Your Buick Dealer'
Phone 5151
for the Gibson Girfr
Grand-daughter.
Or
Spring Tonic
For Your
1948
x I I
vvararoDei
Circular Skirts of 100 Wool
Refreshingly colorful plaids in soft tones that
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ment from which to choose.
$7.95 to $10.95
MAGNETIC BLACK WHIRL SKIRTS
Rayon Faille and Moire in full whirling skirts that will be mag
netic with the frothy, white GIBSON GIRL BLOUSES!
$7.95 to $10.95 ...
PENCIL SLIM SKIRTS
New pencil slim grey and tan skirts of gabardine and rayon and
wool in pin stripes and small checks. ,
$5.95 to $12.95
Gibson Girl Blouses
Black and pin stripes lri long sleeves
with collar and cuffs of Pique. Step Into
a new season in one of these gay new
creations!
$5.95
Gibson Girl Sheer Blouses
Pine dotted Swiss with frosty ruffling
on neckline and about the sleeves. White
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$4.98
New Slip-on Sweaters
Pine qunlity 100 wool sweaters tn short
sleeve styles. Newest pastel colors. Sires
34-40.
$2.98
New Cardigan Sweaters
Soft, cashmere sweaters In new pastels
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Mm
v i
if
SPORTS SHOP 2ND FLOOR
!