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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1956)
TUESDAY, JANUARY 10. 195B HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE JTVTB Qlitc FRANK JENKINS Pallor BILL JENKINS Managing. Editor Weeks Ahead By BILL JENKINS Now that we are well into a new year It Is perhaps time to gird the old loins for the 1956 battle of the weeks. Chronologically there are 5a weeks in our year, even in leap year, which this happens to be. But business - wise there are more than 400 weeks. These range all the way from National Health Baked Bread Week to National Pass the Laugh Week. During 1956 you will be urged at various times to enjoy National Tie Week (not to be confused with Na tional Bow Tie Week), National Crochet Week and National Ssw and Save Week. There are such things as National Better Break fast Week and a National Wear a Hat Week to promote the wearing uf headgear for men. All in all, it's a busy old year ahead. If you want to be really ahead of the game and In the know you can secure, through the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a list ing of all these weeks. Not that such a list will tell you how to sandwich eight or ten weeks into one, but at least you'll have your confusion outlined in a neat manner. What with this piling up of weeks, daylight saving time, con gress in session and the revised Canasta rules it looks like a mixed up year for us Americans. Appropriate Address Depart ment The R. T. French Company, makers of bird food and experts on the care and feeding of parakeets, canaries and other forms of cage birds, hold forth at One Mustard Street in Rochester, New York. If you think this is a rough win ter you want to cast back in your memory to a few that were rough er. The last big one we had in this country was the winter of 1935-36. I want to go back in the files and look up some of the data on that one. But while doing some file work the other day in the 1937 bound file I came across an Item telling about 16 Poe Valley children who were marooned by a storm on Jan uary 28 while on their way home from the Olene school. They had to take refuge In the Henley school after their school bus driver, A. L. Wilkinson, turned back two miles from the Olene school. The chil dren were, the paper says, "well taken care of at the Henley school with Mrs. Winifred Darnell in charge." The storm (described as a bliz rard in the headline) closed the Greensprings and had all available plows out. The road to Lakeview was "open but tough" and all trav el was discouraged. I maintain that there hasn't been a real blizzard in this country for a great many years, but we've had some corkers of storms. And that one in 1937 was apparently a pretty fair one. Age Of Man By KEN McLEOD American archcologists have been working for years upon the story of the arrival of man in America, assuming that the Amer ican Indian is of Mongoloid ances try and migrated to North Amer ica at a very early but remote time crossing from Sibera to Alas ka. In a way this story Is of inter est to us here in the Klamath Basin because of our geological position it is now thought that that some of these early migration waves of people upon the pacific coast had to pass through our area. The arrival at some time date Is a perplexing question. The an cestors of the Indians did not write books, the first comers were too primitive to have developed any form of written speech; nor did anv of the early Indians keep rec ords until a comparatively late date Just before the dawn of the coming of the white man. So dates for this first discovery of Amer ica must be considered in rela tive terms. The questions must be phrased thus: Was aboriginal man here before the great ice sheet swept down across eastern Can ada and into the .northern part of the United States? Did the early migrant see the mammoth and the mastodon? Did he see the original wild horse of America? Did he see the American camel? The sloth? The "ferocious" saber -toothed tiger? For many years scientists and explorers have been searching In caves and elsewhere, seeking the remains of man and his works, with a special eye toward the bones of the animals he used for food. It is hoped that by such as sociation it can be proved that man did live here early enough to have seen these animals. Ii a man could be discovered who had used these animals the evidence would be complete and conclusive. Regardless of controversy '.he story of ancient man slowly and relentlessly unfolds before us as we advance in knowledge and In technological skills. For a long time archeology could offer no sat isfactory evidence that the first "red Mongoloids" from Asia saw any of the known extinct animals, but within the past decade the case has become stroncer. Up to the past year there were five justly lamous places where early man left his evidence for our research ers to discover. The first of these is on the campus of the Univer sity of Alaska, near Fairbanks: an other is near Fort Collins, Colo rado: Folsom. New Mexico; Clo vis. New Mexico: Fell's Cave, southern Chile. And the past year has brought the most dramatic discovery up to the present time has been at Tule Springs in south ern Nevada. The discoveries here confirm disputed evidence found at Gypsum Cave, Nevada, only a JHcralb Entered u second class matter ml the post office at Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 30, 1906, under act of Congress, March (, 187 SERVICES: ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California short distance east of Tule Springs. Tnere are many more places where more or less doubtful traces of I early man have been noted, their evidence becomes more important as the case oi the story strength ens and their story re-examined in the strength of firmer knowl edge. Tnere was an old pioneer axiom, "Where there's smoke, there's fire." Anyway the important sign posts as indicated by these arche oiogical sites serve as scattered markers for a trail that could be gin in Alaska and end at Cape Horn. Alaska was rich in game is the story gleaned from the bones of animals discovered there. The stu dents of fossils tell us that even while the great ice sheet lay over much of Canada, there was open grassland in Alaska and southwest ward to the Gulf of Mexico. For ests now cover most of the area in Canada where the great ice sheet once lay. but the forefather of the American Indian found a great open country east of ihe Rocky Mountains extending west ward to the Pacific Ocean and south to Mexico. Many species of extinct deer and bison roamed these plains when those old Gobi like hunters camped at Fairbanks. Science now apparently begins to accept the Idea that the first immigrants from Asia started a great movement of population to ward the east, like the same west ward tvpe of movement followed in the footsteps of Columbus at a much later dale. Band after band moved in. Those first on the ground disliked the intrusions of those who followed and, like Dan iel Boon and his kind, sought the freedom of the wilderness. Even tually a tribe found Tule Springs more than 23,800 years ago. Did thev pass through the Klamath Bt sin? We wonder for It Is within possibility. ISfciiig Artist By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK lPl Many elderly ladies who dote on Liberace prob ably never heard of Roger Wil liams. They don't swoon and have to be revived with smelling salts every time he sits down at a piano. On the other hand, Williams, a rising young artist of the key board, has a solid achievement to his credit that so far has evnded the curly-haired "man in the silver lame tuxedo." Liberace, whose albums have done well, has never yet' turned out a real hit record. Williams has. His lirst recording, the popu lar "Autumn Leaves," hes solo more than 1. 200.003 platters, re mained a solid hit for five straight months. This kind of thing is usual ly only an instrumentalist s dream. "And It still seems like a dream (o me," confessed the 31-year)ld Navy veteran. Roger, son of a prominent Des Moines, la., Lutheran minister, won considerable success in the Midwest belore coming to New York. Two lucky breaks helped lift him from the ruck in which hundreds of fine musicians find themselves lost here. The first break came when he went to a television talent show to serve as accompanist for a young singer. "She was too. nervous to go on." Roger recalled, "so I was asked to fill In by playing a few num bers of my own." The audience liked him so well he won the $1,000 prise. He got the second break by at tending the recording session .of another artist. The session ended half an hour early. The head of the firm suggested Roger re hearse a number himself. Williams happened to have the music for "Autumn Leaves" with him. He sat down and played it. Tlie rehearsal recording turned out to be just what the man want ed. In 20 minutes one of the year's top records was born. The piano mastery of this hand some, quiet-spoken young artist, however, is no happy accident. Roger was playing by ear at the age of three. At four he had al ready begun writing his own com positions. Williams, who hopes to combine a concert career with tours of the supper club circuit, is a serious musician with a great fondness lor Jazz, too. As a performer, he'd like t? have the range of both Paderewski and Count Basie with maybe a bit of Victor Borge thrown in. He feels it is a mis take to overspecialkc. "The musician of tomorrow will have to be able to play all these things," he said. "They have been predicting the downfall of Jazz for 20 years. But jazz is definitely an art form. We will never get away from it." Kxlresiflenls I By JAMES MARLOW I WASHINGTON I For years i there's been an uneasv feeling in j Congress that something should be done for ex-presidents, either to 'give them a nonvoting scat In the I Senate, or enough money to live on. or both. The first effort in this direction was In 1928 when a bill was offered to give ex-presidents a Senate seat. It wasn't done then, or since, and there's a pretty good chance it won't be done this year either. Tne Senate, last year approved a bill to gic the only two living ex presidents. Hoover and Truman, and all future ex-presldents: a sal ary of 122.500 a year for lite, free mailing privileges, an oflice .stall, and a furnished oflice. When an ex-president died his widow would get $10,000 a year for life. Some members of Conzress have felt that just giving ex-presidents a pension was not cnoueh, that some way should be found to let the aitb .foitrs country benefit from their Whitei House experience. That thinking has taken this) form: Make an ex-president auto matically a member of the Senate, with the title of senator-at-large. He wouldn't be elected. He wouldn't have a vote either. Nevertheless, he could get up and talk on any subject at any time and even perhaps serve on committees. His salary would be the same as any regular senator: $22,500 a year. Last year Sen. Ki'gore (D-WVa and Rep. Chelf (D-Ky) Introduced bills to carry out this idea. It's still locked up in committees in House and Senate and may never get out on the floor of either chamber for a vote. Some lawyers think this bill couldn't' become law without an amendment to the Constitution. Some think It could. Here are some arguments against the Idea of making ex-presidents senators- at-large: It would be unconstitutional be cause the constitution clearly says each state Is entitled to only two senators, each of whom shall have one vote, and that they shall be elected by all the people of their state. It might he possible to get around some of this constitutional provi sion by not giving an ex-president n Senate vote. But what of the question of numbers? Once he took his seat his state would have three senators. And this Is another question: Suppose an ex-president has only served one four-year term. If he then became a scnator-at-large he might use the Senate as a forum to get himself elected president again four years later. To get around these objections Chelf changed his bill. Under this an ex-president still would auto matically get a Senate seat but he would be called a Senate dele gate. And once an ex-presldent accept ed a Senate seat, he'd be barred forever from becoming president again. Why a Senate delegate? Be cause some lawyers think giving an ex-president such a title would make a constitutional amendment unnecessary. 1th Factor By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. A heart-broken mother has re cently written as follows: "My husband and I have been married four years and in this time I have had three miscarriages and have carried one baby the full .nine months. This child was perfect when born but died 15 minutes after birth. "My doctor said that death was because of my blood type and my husband's. Can you say anything aoout wnat is causing tnts trou ble?" This letter and others like It raise the question of the so-called Rh factor of the blood which I have discussed before but about which there Is still some under standable confusion. The substance known as the Rh factor is present in the blood of some people and not In others. The blood of anyone can be tested for this substance. Today this is one of several tests fre quently used to find out what blood groups a person belongs to. The particular Importance of the Rh factor, however, Is in relation to pregnancy because it may cause miscarriage or a disease in the infant known as erythroblastosis. The Rh Factor Is complicated by the fact that it consists of sev eral types. Stated most simply, however, 87 per cent of us have an obscure substance in our blood which classifies us as being Rh positive. The other 13 per cent are called Rh negative. Those of us with this type blood can become sensitive to RH positive blood with possible dangers not only in pregnancy but also from blood transfusion. If a woman has Rh negative blood and becomes pregnant with an Rh positive child (because the father Is Rh positive), the child may be born wltb a disease known as erythroblastosis fetalis. However, this does not always occur. The first child is usually healthy (and often later ones) un less the mother has previously re ceived blood transfusions with Rh positive blood, and this is becom ing rare due to greater care in giving transfusions. Furthermore, only about one woman in 25 or 60 with Rh nega tive blood and an Rh positive hus band becomes sensitive and gives hirth to a baby with erythroblas tosis. It should be pointed out also that, even if a child does have erythroblastosis, much can often be done be giving blood transfusions after birth. Whereas three quarters of the Infants with erythroblastosis formerly died, now nine out of ten can be saved with the right kind of transfusion. To summarize the situation: If both parents are Rh positive there is little to worry about. If the mother Is Rh positive and the fath er Rh negative, there is nothing (o worry about. If the mother Is Rh negative and the father Rh positive occasional trouble can be anticipated, but this is by no means inevitable. nv Alloys By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK W One large con struction company has a "metal dentist" spending his full lime fill ing cavities in the 30-pound Iron teeth of power shovels. Railroad switches are retreaded with meia! much as old tires are letreaded with rubber. It's all part of the intense search for new alloys and new processes to make metals perform new tasks SUBSCRIPTION RATES CARRIER 1 MONTH t 1.50 ( MONTHS f ft.00 1 YEAR ........... 118.00 MAIL 1 MONTH t I. SO 6 MONTHS t 7 S0 1 YEAR 12.00 and last longer and to cut down on expensive delays In our speeded up mechanized world. On many fronts the drive goes on. By a little shift In the alloy mix in steel furnaces, engineers come up with metal that can take stresses up to 250.000 pounds per square men twice what high strength steels usually are ex pected to withstand but neces sary in the landing gear struts for giant aircraft. Experimenting with heat treat ment oi steel made possible the extra-strong pipe which today's deeper on wens demand. Construction engineers are of fered a new bolt-driving tool utiliz ing a torsion bar and torque ten sion. Ingersoll-Rand says Its device will speed steel construction and In factories make for greater pre cision in driving bolts to desired 'enstons. A vacuum melting process for making high-purity steel promises tcugher roller bearings, longer lasting valve springs, metal parts tnai can witnstana higner temper atures. Capping the broken teeth of power shovels is what metalwork ers call "hardfaclng." Thin metal retr:-dlng process is also used In repairing ploughshares, tractor treads, bulldozer blades, wearing parts of mining machinery, worn cross tracks and switches on rail roads, and hammers. In hammer inuis. The American Manganese Steel Division of American Brake Shoe. v.nicn makes weldlmr rod and mechanical equipment for hardfac lng, contends the process can in crease the life of metal parts from i u is times. No Video By CHARLES MERCER new York wi Tnere arc about 22 million people In this country whose homes are outside the reach of existing television sta tlons. The majority of these live in about 2.000 communities ranging in population irom a.uoo to 20,000. Now comes an energetic young man named Jerome L. Doff who is trying to do something about it as tne President of Trans-Com- munlty-Televlsion Network, Inc. with headquarters In Beverly Hills Calif., he wants to establish closed- circuit television for subscribers in these communities. His five-year goal; one million new television ret owners. Any day now his Idea will bear first fruit in Cedar City, a com munity of about 7,500 in southern Ulan. Here, Doll explained tne oth er day as he hurried through New xora. is now uie pian is worxing in Cedar city. More than 350 citizens have bought their own TV sets and each has paid the corporation an in stallalion subscription fee of (150. A TV station with a three-member staff is being built in town and each subscriber will receive pro grams by wire from the station. Each will pay $7.50 a month ad ditional "an amount we hope to decrease steadily as membership grows," says Doff. Cedar City wilt have eight hours of television a day from 3:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. By an arrangement Doff has worked out with ABC-TV and NBC-TV, the folks In Cedar City will ace kinescopes and films of whatever programs of those net works Trans - Community Televi sion selects. The plan Is that pro grams will be shown soon after iheir appearance on the network stations. Quotes By UNITED PRESS NEW YORK Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas on the new Russian look after his recent extensive tour of the Soviet Union: "The smiling, peaceful prosper ous Russia Is the most difficult International problem America has yet faced." NEW YORK Henry Ford, II, on the idea of investors buying Ford Motor Co. stock with the in tention of making a fast dollar: "We of Ford Motor Co. are busi nessmen and not miracle men." WASHINGTON A Senate Ju diciary subcommittee in its pre liminary report to the Senate on narcotics traffic: "Heroin smugglers and peddlers are selling murder, robbery, and rape, and should be dealt with ac cordingly. Their offense Is human destruction as surely as that of murder. In truth and in fact, it Is 'murder on the installment plan.' " MIAMI BEACH A Florida va cationist on the cold wave: "We're going back Just as soon as we can find the other half of our bus ticket which we lost around here someplace." MONTE CARLO, Monaco An drew Vavier. 25. bank clerk, on reports Prince Rainier III and Grace Kelly will wed in the United States: "It is unthinkable that the sov ereign should marry outside his own principality." RAMSTEW, Germany MaJ. Gen. Robert M. Lee. commander ot the U.S. 12th Air Force, in or dering his airmen to pare down their waistlines: "Flying personnel will be sus pended from flying activities until the reductions have been accomplished." They'll Do It Every Whew bisdome is om the towsi me thinks nothlmg of hiring those ch4uffeured cars kiigmt4fter nlght- wow.' A LIMOUSINE.' WIS IS THE THIRD TIAtE , WEEK-; V ffiYc wilTMBin W SPE4KING"-OyR BILL S45 IHIKtD SA 'Operation Manpower' Staged By National Guard Capt. Forrest Alter, commander of Battery D of the 732nd AAA Battalion, Oregon National Guard, reported today that "Operation Manpower," a drive for 62 new recruits. Is progressing and that any Interested recruits, or veter ans, should contact the guard of fice before the openings are all filled. The occasion for the week-long recruiting campaign being staged by batteries D and B (commanded by 1st Lt. Leonard Springer 1 Is the conversion nt me lima to uie new 75inm "Skysweepcr" anti aircraft mm. This gun is the latest electronically controlled weapon of its type. The recruiting of the additional 62 men will bring both batteries ill) to a total full strength of 255 ottlcers and men. inese men win be needed to man the new guns. The batteries are at present equipped with 40 mm guns. The new guns will De siauonco at Klamath Falls during the year and ire transported to the annual ummer camp, usually held in June of each year at Camp Clat sop, near Astoria, Oregon Operation Manpower" will end Sunday, January n, wun a iuu day of activity for tne memDcra of the units. Personnel of the bat- tcrics will don dress uniform and leave the airport drill buildings In pairs to visit residents ot Klam ath Falls, armed with "Informa tion Without Obligation." Young men between the ages ol '.7 and 18. con fulilll their whole military obligation without leaving home, school or their Jobs, LI Springer reports. Men past 18", who face the draft can Join the National Guard, work for promotion, and If eventually drafted, can retain their gunrd rank in the Army by applying for a tour of extended active duty. Veterans can Join the guard and retain their rank If the battery has a vacancy in his rank and MOS. Those who have a remaining re serve obligation can shorten this obligation by belonging to the Na tional Guard. Retirement with pay is an im- nortant point for applicants, es pecially those with prior military' experience, Capt. Alter pointed out. A guardsman wno retires alter 20 years service receives a pen sion starting at age 60 years com mensurate with ms rank and amount of active duty. Guardsmen may also work to wards officer's rank in several ways, It was pointed out. In one four-year post-war period 60.000 men received commissions from the ranks of the National Guard in the U.S. The guard officers said that the Army offers 450 special schools which a guardsman may attend. He may study such subjects as radar, radio, auto repair, ad vanced electronics and many oth er courses. While attending scnooi he draws full pay according to his rank, plus allowances tor food, clothing and quarters. When a man finishes nis scnooi he returns to his home unit where his knowledge will help him at tain higher rank. His military schooling also may aid him in his civilian occupation, it was plained. The most recent trainee in tne 732nd Battalion to receive such training is Gary Christlieb of Ash land, who worked seasonally in the woods and lumber mills. After Lake County Offices To Close LAKEVIEW (iPI Lake County offices will be closed on Saturdays ed at lt first 10.SH meetlnff I Exceptions will be at the clerk's office when the last day of voter registration falls on a Saturday and at the sheriff's oflice when the last day of a tax collection period is a Saturday. All offices will be open during ihe noon hours the other days of j the week. MOORE FILL'S SALEM I Mrs. Sollis Moore. Moro. filed her candidacy Mondny for Republican national commlltec woman. She wishes to succeed Mrs. Olive Cornett, Klamath Falls, who said she won't run for reelection. FREE Bowling Lessons FOR WOMEN BEGINNERS I lIf KT l.ANf.i- PHONE l!II Time .m . But at the end of the -month WHEN THE BILLS COME lMOI,BOy" - TH4T'S DIFFERENT' -vl: ow4v...usHl iWhello.lichv lwousine? j.r BiepoME m completing a 39 week course In electronics, Christlieb returned to Headquarters Battery of the 732nd serncant first class. He also has found employment as a tele vision technician at a television appliance firm. Members of the guard are also offered an opportunity to apply for the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York. An average ol 52 ex-guardsmen are graduated from the "Point" and commission ed in the Army each year. Lt. Springer also pointed out that the average payroll for Klam ath Falls from the guard averages $150,000 per year. Guardsmen receive a full day's Army pay for each two-hour drill period each week. At the two-week annual camp they are paid at the same rate- as the Army pays a soldier In their same rank. Lt. Col. Francis C. Ayrcs, com manding officer of the 732nd AAA Battalion, stressed the Importance of channeling the excess energy of young men into profitable activi ties for themselves and the com munity through .this training for leadership among men. "The same qualities which earn stripes for a corporal or sergeant, emerge me necessary Ingredients for man's success In his Job, business or profession." he said. Tears Of Joy leo. N. Taylor - What did it cost Ood" to bring lira eternal me, mat young woman who smiled thru her tears and said "I've Just been saved to-day. What did it cost God? First he gave Christ, his only-born Son to die for her. Nailed there to the cross, Christ's blood washed away all her sin. for the blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son. cleanses away all From the cross, Christ, the Eternal Son, went down Into the pains of hell. Centuries before. Ood spoke thru his prophet Isaiah, saying that Christ would suffer all "travail" the word we use is Birth - Pains." So there In hell. Christ took all the suffering that her sins had earned her. "For God so loved the world that he gave his only-born Son that who ever believed on Him shall not perish but have eternal life John 3:16. What for you? Heaven or hell? Tills Message sponsored by a Portland Lumberman. Adv. Lrz NOME BATES W5f EVERY 15 SECONDS --OF EVERY SHOP PING DAY --SOME LUCKY WOMAN BE COMES THE PROUD OWNER OF A - - NORGE WASHER OR DRYER! WHY? Because onlyNORGE is absolutely quorontecd to safely wash and dry any fabric safe in water . . . Nothinq, however, will take the place of seeinq for yourself! NORGE RATES FIRST! OWN A NORGE Either May Be Purchased Separately TELE-PLIANCE 11th & Walnut By Jimmy Hatlo ' APPOINTMENT NEW DELHI, India WI The government Tuesday appointed a committee to investigate the causes of a Jaundice epidemic In Delhi State which so far has killed 31 and sent over 1.000 to the hos pital. One cause Is thought to be a flow of sewage into the filtered water supply after recent floods. I A handy guide to help you 1 find the Services & Products I V you need! M. SAWDUST RECAPS Give You More Trac tion When Applied with Kraft System Recapping Monarch Tire Service ... YOUR GENERAL TIRE DEALER 31S So. 6th We Give JWf Gm Stamps Hi. 707V STORM SASH Screen Deert Saih Glau tttlmatai Gladly (Uvea THE GLASS HOUSE 215 North Ufh ' Phone) 7477 KEN'S FIXIT SHOP "If Kan Con't Fix ItWHirow It Awy" , Welding Lotht Work Broiinf Outboard Moftr So li and Strvieo Precision Lawn mower Grinding and Repairing !": KEN WALLAN 4645 SOUTH 6th St. EMPIRE TRANSPORT INC. Commercial and Heavy Trucking 2802 So. 6th Phone 9240 Day or N ighr WESTERN OIL 184$ So. 6th Wa Gira GW Brown Sramai y. Phone 3871 '. : i ' -: ( " A. v i L? BOTH ONLY 289" And Your Old Washer Air Force Ups Recruit Quota The U.S. 'Air Force has opened wide the door to voluntary enlist ment, according to an announce ment today from T-Sgt. D 0 D Adams, local USAF recruiter. - Sfifl. Adams said that the USAP will accept eight new recruits from this area this month. This Is an Increase of three more than were enlisted during December when the quota was five. The new opportunities for train lug and service in the Air Force arise through the need to meet the 137 wing goal authorized last year by the Joint Chiefs of Sta if and Congress, Sgt. Adams stated. During the past six months, Air Force recruiting offices had to cease taking enlistments upon reaching their monthly quota. As a result, many local men who wished to Join the Air Force were denied the opportunity.' The Air Force recruiter said that local men enlisting in January will be sent to Parks Air Force Base for their first phase of basic train ing prior to being sent to one of the technical training schools of fered enlistees. Full Information concerning the opportunity for enlistment in the Air Force can be obtained by con tacting Sgt. Adams at his office In the federal building, Klamath Falls. . PIPELINE COMPLETED MOSCOW, WI The Soviet gov ernment announced Tuesday the completion of an 800-mile oil pipe line from Omsk In southwestern Siberia to Tulmazy In the Bashkir Republic in the Urals. 2 CALL 3121 For Authorized AAA Service Balsiger Motor Co. Your Ford Dialer Main t Eiplanada Quality Fuel Oils G.E. Furnaces Due-Thfrm H'otari & BURNER CO. CENTER Ph. 7709 Norge Woihtr Marge Dryer AW 40J AE 600A