WEDNESDAY, MAY 19,1948
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON
PACE THIRTEEN
Special Speakers To Be At Presbyterian
3
ll(. (iliOUOK I. I'AIK
DON IIOIIACIO (iON7.AI.KH
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PAI I, R. AIIHOTT. D.I).
Missionaries To Speak
At First Presbyterian
Three oiitAtiititllitit speakers (rum
th nilMloiinry field will prnk hi
the Klisl I'rrnliyN'Niin rhun-li. OlM
ml I'lno, ul 1:3(1 p. m. Wriliiwluy
mulrr Uin nunplicji of the board n(
fiirrliiil mlvilimn tit Hie 1'rr.Miytrrliiii
clillrt'll of tlm United Hlntrii.
Tim uumu will be Dr. Heurite L.
Talk, I'll. I). prelilellt (if Clliuien
Chrlittuii iimveMlly In Hemil. Korea;
J hill llmnrlii Onllilles of HltlltlllKu,
Chili', mill I'nul . Abbntl, I J. U..
Clirlntlnii miiuliiiinry In ('hum.
l Dr. I'll I k I a icriicliialo of Pink
collcue. Mo, unit I'rlni-ittnn Thro-
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE-
WltUit CaUewl -AW T-'U Jj Out l
Wlil MrBtof KU' u C.
Tti llvw thnuM rjr mil a Unit 1 pint of
bit ue lot y iir Ih U vv 4y. It UU
bU U ftr ft wing fftw., i.njr f.mtl may tint
It mar Jiwt .Way in ilw )h.wU. Thn
I MeU up -.Mjr turnarh. Yuu tv.n.
tipiMi. Vihi (mi Kuw, sunk and Ua ur!4
ltMika I'urk.
It take thna mild, pntla CarWa Little
IJvt 1'illa to get ttumm t inta irf bila lW.
In frwiy to mak yuu l- "up anil up."
Curl a arliac IUy. i:rfM-t In ttiakln
liilrln tWljr. A I of Carls a UlU Lit
I'Ula, AJ at an dmjatofe.
liHtku) wmlimry, N. J. All Ihrrft nre
prnmUirul Irudrm In tlirlr liclrin,
'II in public In cordially Invited.
Kolluwlnv the public iiipcIIiir, the
Murlnrrh club of the rhtirch will rn
trrlnln for the three gurnlji In the
church b.wrmcnl.
Wool Hits Top
For $2 Per Pound
NKW YOKK. Mny IB iV.-Wool
Inp liHurm hit t'i pound Tura
lythc lilufit price ulnrc wool
nuorlBlm ol the Nrw Ymk colton
rxrhmiKe orKnnlzrd 111 1D31.
Police Officer May. Have
Creek Named After Him
WASHINGTON, Muy 19 M'l A
police ofleer who bilked the Union
Utlon beat In Porlliiiid, Ore., may
have a mountain itream named In
lila honor.
The board on (eoffraphlc namm
dlacloted today It la conaldrrliiK a
proposal that a two-mlle-loim
atream flowlnt northweaiward Into
Tide creek, In Columbia county, Ore.,
be named Endlcott creek (or offi
cer Lawaon Edward Eodlcott, who
died In 138.
The requrat came (rom Endlcott'a
on, n. J. Endlcott, of Deer Inland,
(round with gain of aa much aa
3 V cent a pound.
Ore., who owna land throuxh which
the unnamed atream paaaea.
The board aald the Columbia
county commlMlonera. Oregon 8tat
EiiKlneera aoclety and Orron geo
graphic bard have approved the
proponal. The board Itxelf may take
up the quetlon at IU June meet
Ink.
The foreat aervire In Oregon alao
haa aiiked the board to name a peak
In Whitman National forest for Al
bert O. Anicell, who died In 1941, and
fnlla on the Houth (Jmpqua river for
Robert o: Campbell, an army filer
killed November 12. 1944.
The proposed Angell peak. In the
Blue mountalna on .he boundary be
tween Grant and Maker countlea,
16 mllea north of Bumpter, haa an
elevation of (876 feet. Angell waa
a ranger In the Whitman foreat and
waa aaalatant aupervlaor at Des
chutea National foreat, and also
served In the Portland office.
The tentatively-named Campbell
falls are five mllea downstream from
South Umpqua falls In Douglas
The 3 price was reuched by July
and October deliveries, while top
futures and wool futurea generally
slipiied Into new seasonal high
f :0
lT"Tif I sWTI
HalTflaiVllVJ.f.
ff . fmtm4 D Matwa, a. Maw.
Vote For
JACK FRANEY
Republican Candidate For
SHERIFF
EXPERIENCED AND QUALIFIED
r ASv r,.,..r ii, Bhtriir rub n. I o n.iii. r.
VOTE FOR
CohV.F.SWIGART
for Republican Candidate
for SHERIFF
Ho hoi pleated the people of Klamafh County for 25
yean on outstanding auctioneer. If elected to this
office, ha will continue to please with an efficient, bui-nesi-llke
adminiitration.
ri. ASr. w. r. Iwlsmrt.
county. Campbell was a ranger In
the Umpqua foreat from 1939 to
1943.
The forest service also recom
mend that the 1000-foot high rock
bluff where North Umpqua river
and Pish creek Join, In Douglas
county, be named Flatlron point.
fTTyT T7TJ I TTJTfTTT
A Good Companion!
A midnight mack will make all your friandi
it up and take notice 11 it'i eerred with
mellow Bond & Lillardl Enjoy the rich flavor
of thla smooth Kentucky whiskey, tonight!
t&v N0W!
iiiiiiH iitiiuEis piiiieii eiipiiiTiu, iei tin. i. r. . uiticit mmtt-i iihi 11 miif . is ittn iniui trtim
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Yl"" " -' on
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PAINT C83
Rj, X
lerricrf
General Paint Store
515 Main St. Phone 3829
Van Meter Hardware, Malin
Arney's Paint & Hardware, Lakeview
Favil West, Tulelake
OUR NEW PLANTS WILL PERMIT
GREATER FOREST CROP UTILIZATION
A NEW sulphate pulp mill at Longvlew, Waahington, to
process milling and logging left-overs. Will employ 250 men,
and is expected to begin operation thia summer.
A NEW plywood plant at Longvlew,Washington,began oper
ating in December, 1947. This plant is now undergoing further
expansion. It will ultimately employ 325 peoplt.
-x-r. sxvi
ANEW plant at Springfield, Oregon. Will include sawmill,
planing mill, dry kilns and container board factory, furnishing
employment for aeveral hundred people.
JLJIlllimMeaaSBW!lasii
A NEW bark product! plant in Longview, Washington, be
gan operating in June, 1947. Represents an important step
toward making some of the bark former total waste into
useful producta.
LiAST YEAR this company's expenditures for plants were $18,500,
000, and we will invest $28,000,000 more in similar construction
during 1948-49 if the work can be accomplished. (Above are shown
the types of plants for which this money is being; spent.)
For some time our company has been developing; a whole crop
utilization program. We are building diversified manufacturing
plants needed to get maximum use and dollar value from each tree
grown. We can build these permanent plants because each millsite
we are developing is supported by tree farms of sufficient acreage
to provide a continuous timber supply forever.
We are living in an inflationary period. Everything is higher
than ever before sales, wages and profits. Industry's cost of livinjj
has increased right along with that of the individual. But in these
times of surplus deflated dollars, we must give thought to tomor
row's competitive market.
As a private enterprise, looking at it from this long-range view,
we believe it is good business to expand our plants now even
though costs are high. We believe our whole crop utilization pro
gram will ultimately earn steadier profits from the timber harvest.
At the same time it will make more permanent jobs, help give stabil
ity to the communities in which we operate, increase the number
of useful forest products, and provide a dependable tax source to
government. We believe this policy is sound in its service to all.
1947 HIGHLIGHTS
about Wmyrhamufr
Total Salts J102.551.190
Total Replir Persona!. 7,010
Total Taxts Paid $17,201,323
Tins Paid PirEitployit $2,415
Aftrago Eanini of Hourly Eaplijiis $3,203
Dnridtnds Paid per Shan if Stack . . $3.00
(Balance of net Income retained foe
plant additions and operating capital)
Of Total National Soft Wood
Lumber Productioi, wo adaiptrox. . 4t
Of Total Commercial Forest Lands hi
tkegon and Washinttei wo owe
approximately 1
' (Mostly in tree faraie)
I
in ifi
V.Y
A
WEYERHAEUSER TIMBER COMPANY
WORKING IN TMC PACIFIC NORTHWEST TO CfKATf PRODUCTS, PAYROLLS AND PROFITS
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