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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1954)
MONDAY, AUGUST 2. 1954 1IERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE N1NI dud rujo, .a., ton of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Fallcowski, 422 Broad, left Friday for San Di ego after spending a 12-day boot camp leave here. Foss attended high school in Bon anza before joining tha Navy. Canada Iron Ore Moves To US Mills SEPT ILES,. Que. (fl Iron ore from newly tapped veins on the Quebec - Labrador border began tunneling toward American steel mills today. Millions of tons will follow. Ex perts say it may take SO or 100 years to get out all the ore that lies In the rust-tinged hills barely a thousand airline miles northeast of New York. This iron ore Is the basic stuff that is converted Into iron, steel and then motor cars or other pro ducts. There is about 65 per cent iron in the ore that has been piling up the last month at the docks of this St. Lawrence River port, brought here on a railroad built Just for that purpose. The railroad takes 357 miles, through some of the wildest territory In North America, to get from the open pit mines to dockside here. Today the first consignment Is being made to the mills. The ore is being loaded into a 2,000 ton freighter for shipment out the St. Lawrence and down the Atlantic Coast to Philadelphia. It Is going to five steel makers Republic, National, Armco, Wheeling, and Youngstown Sheet it Tube., They, Co. of Cleveland and the Hollinger in concert with the M. A. Kanna Consolidated Gold mines, Ltd., control the Iron Ore Co. of Canada, developers of this 250 million dol lar Canadian ore project. The ore is produced at Knob Lake in an area that has little to recommend it except fishing and iron deposits. There are no roads through the miles of muskeg- mossy bogs that surround Knob Lake. It took three years to build the single track railroad. A ton of ore is worth $7 or $8 at dockside here. This year only about million tons will be scooped up and brought here. By 1956 the Iron Ore Co. hopes to be moving 10 million tons a year, enual to about a seventh of the annual output from the famous Mesabi Range in, Minnesota, which Is Beginning to oe aepieiea. General Backs Ground Forces HARRIMAN, N.Y. 11 Gen. Matthew Ridgway, Army chief of staff, says the nation should not forget the value of ground forces in an overemphasis on air power and nuclear weapons. "It is vitally important to re member that wars are won by the achievement of domination over human beings and the territory they inhabit, and that only land forces can achieve and maintain such domination," he declared last night. "To do so they require strong support from the air and from the sea. But in the final analysis It must be the land forces which as sert control and determine the victory." Ridgway spoke at a meeting of business, labor, government and professional leaders. Ridgway recalled that In World War II, despite heavy bombing, "Germany was defeated only when its armed forces were crushed." Ridgway's speech did not speci fically mention the atom bomb or the H-bomb. However, he referred to a newly developed "capability for tremendous destruction" which has given Impetus to the search for a simple solution to the problem of defeating an enemy's armed forces. One Killed In USAF Air Crash ST. JOHN'SN Nfld. tfl Head quarters of the U.S. Air Force Northeast Air Command reported Friday that an SA19 amphibian aircraft crashed Into a house at St. Anthony in Northern New foundland, kllline a civilian and injuring 11. An American spokesman said the twin-engined plane apparently fell on a takeoff. The 11 persons Injured were aboard the amphibian. The one killed was on the ground or in the house. I IV SUITAILf THB PAT OF PROTECTION Pat On-Spt iato di cnit t tyoi tat af maul' W-Bnatmitr (. ! 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