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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1958)
SUNDAY. AUGUST 10, 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE 5 A Business News By FLORENCE JENKINS BALDWIN PAPPAS The appointment of C. Ward Baldwin to a newly created sales position within the Oregon district at Klamath Falls for Tidewater Oil Co. has been announced by Glenn A. Hill, Oregon district mar keting manager tor Tidewater . a native of Seattle, Baldwin studied pre-law and business administra tion at the University of Washing ton and joined Tidewater at Seat tle after active duty with the Navy, . . . Baldwin has also been named chairman of the Oil Industry In formation Committee, Klamath Falls ... he is married and has three children. Walter J. Pappas, who success fully passed his state of Oregon architectural examinations in 1954, has opened his own offices in the old Pine Grove schoolhouse which was remodeled into a studio by the late Sheldon Brumbaugh. . . . Pappas worked in Portland three years with architectural offices in cluding that of Glenn 'Stanton ittanton, Boles, McGuire & Church) before coming to Klamath rails three years ago and joining the staff of Howard K. Perrin, architect, 1121 Maui St. . . . at Perrin s office he was most re cently working on plans and sped- lications for the new Yreka High School ... a previous interesting job was drawing plans for the new poultry laying house at the Good ing Poultry Farm which was re cently completed. . . . Pappas came to Oregon from Duluth, Minn ... is a graduate of the Iowa State College school of archi tecture ... he married a home town girl in Duluth and they have three boys, David, 9, John, 5 and Ted, 4, and live at Pine Grove. building at 540 Main St., as sched uled at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 12 . five general contractors have taken out plans from Morrison & Howard, architects, 203-05 Wil liams Bldg ... the bid opening on Tuesday does not include any planning for use of the three-story brick building adjacent to the bank, the purchase of which was announced on Friday. Frank R. Bogatay opened Boga- tay's Family Shoe Store at 617 Main St. on Friday, complete with a real Buster Brown to ad vertise Buster Brown shoes which Lien's Grocery, 3SH0 Summers Lane, operated by Mr. and Mrs. Boy P. Lien, 3950 Summers Lane. has reopened after a complete face-lifting and remodeling wnicn included doubling the size of the previous store. . . . Lewis Hes cock, 2709 Kane, was general contractor on the job . . . expan sion permits bigger milk and beer cold counters, additional frozen foods cabinets and other conveni ence ... all new Neon ngnis in Ftalled ... the Liens have been in the grocery business in Klam- nl h Falls for nearly 30 years and the hardworking couple keeps the clnra niwn Irnni H Q m In ill n ftl have been on American young- and on Sunday. tay has been in the shoe business from park headquarters and dor mitories for Standard Oil person nel . . . there were five bidders. . . . Salter & Kleim, Grants Pass i$49,B2t. . . . Batzer Construc tion Co., Medford i$48.694. . . . Meyer D. Jones, Medford ($39,85n). . . . Ausland Construction Co., Grants Pass ($47,400). G. C. Motley, Inc., and Kimes Plumbing & Heating, bolh of Klamath Falls, have been selected as dealers for a new type central heating unit which is being manu factured by Montag, inc., Port land heating equipment makers since 1880 . . . ,the new unit is ap proved by Underwriter's Labora tories and can be attached to the warm air ductwork in a new or older home . . . there are more than 40 dealers signed up in Ore gon. , , since 1931 ... he joined Miller's Department Store at Yakima in 1934 and came to Klamath rails in 1937 to establish the shoe de partment in the local Miller's store ... opening of the new store marks his first venture into business for himself. . . . Dick McGraw of Lakeview and Dan Phelan of Beaverlon will be on the regular sales staff and Kay Blake, a recent KUHS graduate, will handle sales of hoisery and bags ... the store will stock be tween 6500 and 7000 pairs of men's. women s, teen-ager s and chil dren's shoes. Ray O. Petersen, Klamath Coun ty agent, returned on Aug. 1 from a week's tour of Bay Area live stock markets, packing plants. auction yards, Safeway's meat handling and distributing operation in San Francisco and other whole- ' Bids will be opened by George sale-retail operations . . . aceom W. Mclntyrc, president, First panying him was W. Y. Fowler, Federal Savings & Loan Assn., for livestock marketing specialist from remodeling o; the present bank I Oregon State College. Bids will be opened at 2 p.m. on Aug. 15 at the offices of the archi tects, Morrison It Howard, 203-05 Williams Bldg., for rerooling tne Old Armory building at Main and Spring . . . plans and specifica tions from the architect . . . work will consist of furnishing approxi mately 145 squares of built-up roofine of Johns-Manville. Pioneer, Flintkote or proved equal type and applying the new roofing over tne present roof . . . bids will be ap proved by Ted Case, secretary of the Armory board, veterans me morial Bldg., Klamath Falls. Award on Aug. 5 to Freeland Construction Co., Columbia City Ore., on low bid of $39,240. for building a covered entranceway to the park administration building at Crater Lake National rarK, com fort stations and an entrance station at Annie Spring . . . award made by Tom Williams, park superintendent. . . . Harlo Free land is presently building the new Standard Oil service station across Bids will be opened at 11 a.m., August 25. at the U.S. Forest Service. 630 Sansome St., San Francisco, 11, for the construction of two 3-bedroom residences and one 2-car garage at the Tulelnke ranger station on the Modoc Na tional Forest . . . location of the ranger station is at the town of Tulelake . . . copies of the bid Invitation may be secured from the San Francisco address above or viewed only at the office of the forest supervisor of the Modoc in Alluras. enter the second Gallery of Fine Printing and Lithography compe tition sponsored by the Simpson Paper Co., Everett, Wash. . . . entries must be submitted by Aug. 15 (next Friday) to be included in the fall judging. tion service at Redmond years before jcir.ing the commission. . E. M. Katzer of Dunsmuir has established a masonry supply yard at Mount Shasta under the name of Shasta Masonry Supply and is a dealer for Glass Mountain Block, Inc.. products from Tuelake. . . Jim Miaft'lt of Klamath Falls. salesmana&rr for Glass Mountain, says the company's sales are up better lhan 12 per cent the first six months this year over the com parable period last year. The board of directors of Con solidated Freightways. Inc., has declared the regular 20 cent quar terly dividend, payable Sept. 15 to stockholders of record Aug. 29. . President J. L. S. Snead Jr.. reported that gross revenue was s45.583,668 for the seven account ing periods ending July 12, com pared to $38,685,576 for the same period last year ... net earnings amounted to 60 cents a share on the average number of shares out standing during the period.. for 11 potato Merchantable timber in the Sil ver Lake area of the Fremont Na tional Forest on approximately 395 acres will be offered for sale at oral auction at the district rang cr's office there at 2 p.m. on Sept, 8 . . . estimated volumes are 379 M board feet of ponderosa pine. 75 M board feet of white fir and 6 M board feet of lodgepole pine . . . minimum acceptable bids are $19.85 for ponderosa and $1 each per M board feet of the other two species. Dr. James L. Adams of Oregon City has been reappointed to a new four-year term on the Veter inary Medical Examining Board the five-member board con ducts annual examinations for ap plicants to the practice of veter inary medicine and surgery In Ore gon. 0 Carl W. Reed. 2608 SE 179th Ave.. Portland, has been reappointed to the State Board of Auctioneers . . . his new term extends to July 16, 1962. 0 Morrison & Knudsen, Inc., Me morial & Green Springs Drive, Klamath Falls (Larry Wicks, man ager), has been awarded a con tract by California Oregon Power Co., for construction of five one- story, two-bedroom operators' cot tages, each approximately 1000 square feet ground area with at tached garages, at Keno for the new Cooco hydroelectric power project being constructed on the Klamath Kiver. Wilbur C. Haskini, secretary rr.nnager of Klamath Basin Grade A Milk Producers, is home with his bachelor of business adminis tration degree from the University of Oregon where he majored in accounting during the last college school year . . . the Grade A Producers Association has put back the word "milk" in the association name ... it was always there, but for brevity the word was left out of the name in advertising and general uso. Mrs. Glenn L. Yaple, a resi dent of Klamath Falls since 1932 who lives with her family at 4600 Anderson, was recently named as manager of VanLces Super 88 Cent Slorc, 1007 Main St. Printers and lithographers in the 11 Western States are invited to Ben Davidson of Salem, former administrator of the Oregon Potato Commission since 1947, has re joined the state department of ag- ncu ture as a shipping point in spector working out of the Salem headquarters ... he was with the Portland General Electric's earn ings report for the first six months of 1958 shows gross operating rev enues at $19,207,108 ... an in crease of $443,539 over compar able period in 1957 '. . . net in come was $6,017,782 ... an in crease of $248,628 over last year . earnings for the six months ended June 30, 1958, based on total shares, was 91 cents. Bids will be opened at 10 a.m Aug. 22, by the purchasing and contracting officer, 408th Fighter Group, Kingsley Field, for apply ing asphalt stabilized sand seal to P.O.L. diked areas at Kingsley Field ... bid Inv. 59-3 . . . bid forms, nlans and specifications are available from the above of- department's shipping point inspec-'ficc. The Pacific Northwest Small Bus iness Opportunity Fair will be held in Seattle National Guard Armory on Sept. 25-26. . . . Ferdinand Srhmltz, president of Berger En gineering and chairman of the fair's executive committee, says government experts and technicians will be present to furnish informa tion on government buying meth ods, prime contract and subcon tract opportunities available to the small businessman of the Pacific Northwest . . . small business from states of Oregon, Washington, Mon tana, Idaho and Alaska will be represented. Soviet Trade Tentacles Reach All Over The Map By THOMAS P. WHITNEY AP Foreign News Analyst Communist trade tentacles reach out all over the world these days but the Reds score their great est trade successes with countries which have surpluses they can't sell easily on free-world markets. To such countries, many of which are highly dependent for their eco nomic wellbeing on only one or a few commodities, the Communists hold out attractive proposals to trade needed Communist-bloc goods for the surplus or unsold commodities. When such deals work out, as they have in many cases, they sometimes result in a situation in which the country ends up in con siderable degree dependent on the new Communist-bloc markets. When they don't work out they slill often result in advantage to Communist countries through the good impression made by the orig inal offers. Iceland and Uruguay are good examples of cases where the deals have worked out favorably for the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. Uruguay is largely de pendent for foreign exchange on the Uruguayan wool crop which has to compete with Australian and other wool on the world mar ket. The Russians moved into a situation in which the Uruguayans were having difficulty disposing of their wool at prices they considered reasonable. As a result, the So viet Union now is the largest buy er of Uruguayan wool and has fur nished Soviet products, particular ly petroleum, in exchange. In Iceland, a small country de pendent on its fish exports, the Russians have long been purchas ers of a large part of the fish catch. Communist-bloc trade now adays amounts to well over one quarter of Icelandic foreign trade. The Icelanders get much of their imports, including oil products, from the Soviet Union. The basis for the large trade between Communist countries and the United Arab Republic is bar ter of Egyptian cotton for arms and other exports from Commu nist-bloc countries. In 1956 Egypt was selling over one-third of its total exports to the Communist bloc and getting about one-seventh of its imports in return. In Burma the Communists made use of the rice surplus of that fertile country to make a big trade deal. They bartered Commu nist products for the Burmese rice under contract and came out big factor in Burmese foreign trade, accounting for more than one-seventh of both Burmese ex ports and imports in 1956. This kind of trading, based on Communist willingness to accept products and commodities which are in some degree drugs on tne world markets, is responsible large degree for Communist pene tration if important markets Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey, Ceylon, Indonesia, India and other coun tries. The Russians and other Commu nist countries are now aiming at Brazilian trade. Offers have been made to accept Brazilian coffee cotton and other products in ex change for Communist oil and oth er products. The Soviets also seek Dig cred its in the United States for pur chases of machinery and other in dustrial enumment. The largest Soviet foreign trade with free-world countries in I9.i7, according to Soviet figures, was done with Finland and Britain. The trade with Finland is a hang over from the immediate postwar period when the Finns built up in dustries to satisfy Soviet repara tions demands. These industries are unable to compete generally with similar industries in other Soviet Trade i I (l cme . 7 csTAaLrsufo Targets , U TPAOeUDtfTS , iM.KHBfc.lJ.,! ,i Western countries and must con tinue to find their markets in the U.S.S.R. The Soviet trade with Britain is highly varied and represents in part a renewal of the prewar So viet trading pattern in which Brit ain is highly varied and represents in part a renewal of the prewar Soviet trading pattern in which Britain was Russia's largest for eign customer and source of for eign commodities. Communist-bloc countries as a whole also do a sub stantial trade with West Germany. But the Communist-bloc countries have never succeeded in making big inroads into markets in more industrially advanced nations. DETROTERS Now yon cn own a 10' wld 50' Ionic boniR full? equipped for leu (ban $5,000. - EASTERN BUILT Treasure Trailer Sales WRONG BAG NEW YORK UPI Bookkeep er Syhrama Youngerman and a. woman companion stopped at ai bank Friday and picked up a $2,000 payroll then dropped into a nearby restaurant to buy a con-! tainer of coffee. j As they were about to enter the ! building of Miss Youngerman's j employer, a daring payroll bandit grabbed the paper bag she was( carrying and fled. i He got the coffee. ' GUARANTEED Vacuum Cleaner REPAIRS Specialized Service on all Makes! No Matter How Old Parti, Bags, Filter! In Stock Free Pick Up and Delivery Dean's Stark's 122 So. 9th TU 4-7193 SINGER THIS IS AN HONEST SAVINQ NOT A REDUCTION FROM A FICTITIOUS "LIST" PRICE JL Hmdi ttblM W.rt Model B. 11-fttM. FEATHERWEIGHT TOUR CHOICE Of EITHER BUDGET OR FEATHERWEIGHT ONLY 1.33 per week 0cikJ HI Ctufiw ftf wtHinww down ptywnt mfl yow dttl trtjm SiNGtt? NO EXTRAS? Carryiitf em, ttUchaintt, SINGER Scwinf Co urn inctut.il cf SINGER SEWING CENTER imm a nmt wot Mar twwi KiM aucniNt COMPMir) 'niTSS?-. 3 Moin Ph. TU 2-2513 . BOVSERJ' Faint 29'annual It's in the underdeveloped na tions and those dependent on ex port of one or a few commodities that the Red trade opportunities are consistently greatest. IT'S CLEANUP TIME at Dugan and Mest Chevrolet. The Jungle Men in their Bermuda shorts stand in front of the Chevy Summer Safari Special. Dugan and Mest, in order to clean up '58 models have cut prices on new Chev pickups to $1995 with only $595 down. Big special includes heater, defroster, electric windshield wipers, 5 wheels and tires, three speed transmission end ell standard equipment. Big Bill Byrd, on the left, was heard saying, "Everyone knows we trade best . . . why do we have to sunburn our knees to prove it?". Apr. Buy one quart BOYSEN RUBBERGL0 Flat Wall Finish (12 beautiful "ready-mired" colors' uou,ruer colon tugnuy tugntr.j Get second quart No limit to quantity I97 (These are not It Salt Items) ODORLESS DREEM SEMI-GLOSS ENAMEL 661 Quart 203 BOYSEN 100 PURE HOUSE PAINT .672 ml662s. PL ASO LUX AMERICA'S FINEST GLOSS ENAMEL 0t 2' 65 9.5 BOYSEN SHAKE AND RUSTIC PAINT c.540 snf 530nf- OLD COLONIAL PORCH DECK FLOOR ENAMEL Oatrt J' Canm ROLLER AND TRAY REGULAR S4.C4 VALUE 098 SKCMU at. Come In today and SAVE I J V. Copeland Yards 66 Main St. In Klamath Falls Phone TU 4-3197 Tulelake Cltiloquin r s FECIAL ON FREEZERS AND REFRIGERATORS N0RGE urthViir $39900 12.5 Cubic Foot Chest Freezer REVC0 iYlANATOWOC ' 22 Cubic Ft. Chest Freezer THIS SPECIAL PRICE ON SHOW MODEL ONLY 9.5900 $33400 22 Cubic Foot UPRIGHT FREEZER SUB ZERO Norge Refrigerator $ With $ I rade 540 269 11 Cubic Foot - Self Defrosting 734 S0 j. w. Gira . 6th Phone TU 4-41