The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, October 08, 1938, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE NINE
FHA's Winter izitig' Drive Produces Results
October 8, 1938
OFFICIAL
VISIT GIVES
Tho "IU'mly for Winter" drlvn
of tho Kniliirul llnimliiit Ailmliils
trnl ton In iiiimIik'Iiik u 1 !'! y t ti 1 1
n vol" mo nf Inmliii'iin In Hi"
Klu mill ll Kill In in i'ii hiiIiI Juanpli
A'. Nimco, deputy "1 "1 o minimis
linlop fur tlm FIIA, Hnturdiiy
aflnr cotitncllnit Kliiliiulll rolull
1 u in Ixi r il"nl"iii.
' "The prlmo ohjncllvn nf llio
drlvn" u lil Mr. Nniici "In In
offant Hi" uatinl aliurp anaiaiMinl
decline In lii 1 11 1 ii K ciniatrucilon
wlnlor apprnnrliea, tn oncour
ago wpalra nnil liiilirovotiixnta In
properly which will Incidentally
ad autumn iiihI winter oiu ploy
niniit, iiihI In furuliih a li'iullii
In ii winter iirnmiiin nf now coii
alriictlnn unit iiindnriilaiitliw In
til nlnto."
Tho atnto of Oregon an it wlinln
U vllnlly Intnrcatoil In thin imilnii
wliln prnKrnin lui'l becnuan nf the
u ion miiiitinlii nf lumber Unit will
tin uac-d and bocauao I tin lumber
will bo Hint lit I tin porlml of I tin
year when nnrmnlly tho mllle
run at alow hell unit thn rrnfla
men who wnrk nt thn count rue
linn liiilumiy inn till". There
la li n butler limn lliuii llio wln
lnr In nmlin rupniia anil linprovo
nionta lo Ihn liialiln nf your lininn
or atom. You ran secure Ihn
workman that you wiini nml they
will aha your work their un
divided intention. Work tiiii hn
ruuiili'lil eipciluliiiialy uml with
out tho delnya aomi'tliiK'a en
countered In tlm huay acnaon.
Under llio KHA plan, any per
iiu with a ilniiioiintriiicd nlillliy
tn meet lila lillla limy an to any
qualified lender nml Imrrow on
liberal lornia for Improvements,
addlllona. anil repair to hla
homo or nthnr bulliliiiKa, with Ihn
government Insuring llio Innii
Thn linrrnwor Itiuat. of roll ran.
own (hn properly or linvo a lease
riiiiiilnil al leual al niontha
lonaer Ihan llio torm of I Ill-
loan.
Kunila In aufflclnnt aniounla
may bn borrowed In rnpnlr nr
liuprnvo oilatlnx atmi'iurea. These
lonna mako It poaalliln tn ohtnln
aiifflrtnni credit lor iiecoaanry
triii-iurnl linprovrini'iita aurh ni
painting, roofing, rofloorlng and
thn llko, and for rehabilitation
aurh aa rewiring, plumhliiE. and
beating.
Thean rapulr louua arn avail
able nnt only fnr homes, but for
all properly Including aparl
mnnl bulldliiga, amall bualiies
btilliltnga and fnclnrlea, farm
realdoncea. farm bullilliiita, ami
farm noccaaltlea aurh aa vlnctrlc
ayatnma. water ayatoma, hnrna,
alloa. and tho llko.
Knnco aiiKKeated that where
douhl exlata aa to tho olcglhlllty
of a Inan under tlm plnn. In
quiry a hou lil bo mndo at ell her
of tho local linnka or by cnlllng
any nnj of Ihu lornl building inii
terlnl dnnlera.
Tho president hua declarod tho
weok of Octnbor nlulll n "Kirs
Provcnllon Week" and I can
think of no better ay to provenl
Mm In tho homo or fiiclnry than
tn keep It In Ilia proper attito of
repair, tho visitor aiild. lie
atatod that fuillly wli'lim and
cracking fluea havo and alwaya
will be a nlthtmn.ro to any flro
ohlef.
, Sovorol Klamath Falla mam
bora of tho Shaala-Caarndo Won
derland anaorlntion and thn (lay
llnotloa orchcatin nf thla city
will bo nt llio Rhiialn-Cnacnde
convention to ha held In Anil liiml
floiiiluy and Tuesday.
Mombera of tho county courl
will bo Included In tho visitors
from Klntnnth Knlls. Tho Clay
.'Nineties orchoatra will play no
a feature of convention entcr
liiliiiuonl. A nuiiihar of Klniunth
pion will have pnrts on tho pro
fta m,
; Tho convention will got undor
Tvay at 8 o'clock Monday morn
ing with tho broil li flint of tho
board of dlroctora and glioma.
Warning luncheon nnd nfturnoou
(roup aosslons will conduct tho
buslnoaa of tho convention and
vnningB will bo dovotod to olnb
crnlo ontortnlnniciit, chief of
Which will bo tho flint public in
itiatory coromony ovor given by
tho fumoiia Crntar club of Mod
ford. Much oonstruotlva planning for
tho further dovolopniout of Its
roaourcos and tho promotion of
groalor tourlHl trnvol into tho
Wondorliintl roglon through tho
BlinHta-CaKciulo Wondoi'lnnd asso
ciation will be undertaken, An
Important solution of tho conven
tion will bo Hint of the Shnstn
Cnacnde expoaltlon commlaalon,
which la the agoncy In chnrgo of
the $200,000 Shiiatu - Cnacndo
Wondorland building and exhibit
at the Snn Francisco World'
fair.
i Tho snap plant la a mitivo of
Mexico nml Colorado. When Its
rools lire ptneoil in wnlur, they
form suds which tuny bo used for
washing.
rtogor Bncon Invented tho first
pair of spectacles, which enme In
fo voguo in tho t lilitoontU century.
PROGRAM PLAN
Hillside
Vur tho third oxumpln In Ita
anrtea of hnme pinna iiNpeolally da
alKned fnr auiiill luveatora who
have turned tu IiiiIIiIIiik hoinea fnr
anla or runt, Wealnrn llomoa
KounUntlon uffora a aolocllon
from a now group of dealgna by
tho nullmial plan aervlee. Tho
wholn group la untitled "llnnio
ward llouiiil."
All tb oiio dealgna lira (1) for
Inveatiniint hnmu biilldlug, and
(2) liuvo henu creatod lo meet
niHii liil wiaiein neeila, Inatea and
i-ojulreuif ma.
"Thn prolili if building on a
hlllalile, realilouilul lot la riiuiinon
In llio weal," wild W. C. Hull,
vlialrinau of Wualuru lluiuoa
foundiitlnu. "renplu who have In
vented In aueh luta keep them Idle
"tun becauau of llio luck of a
Inline plan that will aolvu their
problem uud allll bu a guuil aulva
Ituui Hi tho tonoral liumua mar
ket. Tho plan that wo uru oftur
lug thla week la culled the llud
fiinl. 111 ki It can bo ailuplod to
ulmuat any k I ml of lot, ll la en
pvrlully ultectlvo oa a lilllaldo
tiouao.
"Moat worthy uf note, a feature
that alwaya atrikea admiration In
prnapecta, la tho economical ut III
xaltnu uf apuco which provides
tour lovela lor leaa than tho cost
o( an urUlnuiy amuil two-alory
houao with baaemvnt.
"Theao lovela nru: (1) the at
tached gnrugo with utility room
tn reiir; Ci) one-half flight up,
Ihu living room, illnelio and
kitchen level; CI) unoCller llulf
fllght up, the twu budrounta and
hath; (ll yet another lialt-fllglu
upward, apace which can ba uaed
fnr chlldien'a bedrooma or for
playrooma, aturagu rnuma, etc.
"Knr anyone at all fauilllur
with tho problems of home dealgn
and building, It la worth tho amall
coal nf a not of worked drnwlnga
for The lledfnrd, Juat lo bo nolo
to aludy In detail tho atrlklng
architectural nrrnngement and
atructurnl lnchnlun of this plan,
lino nt thn beat over Issued, In my
opinion, by tho lumbermen'!
Natlonnl l'lan service."
The Family Doctor
lly 1)11. MOltltlH KIH1IIIKIN
lOdltnr, Journal of llio American
Medical Assoclnllnn, anil of
Hygeln, thn Health .Mngnlne
TN tho United Htutoa 106,000
peoplo died In 1037 from ac
cldenla. The rate for Canada Is
40 per cent below that of tho
United States.
In Kngliuid and Wulca there la
constant ngllutlnu ovor deaths
from accidents, yet our death rate
li twlco ns great aa that of Eng
land or Wnloa.
Ono person dlea every 14 mln
ui oa In iho United Htatcs as a
result of an accident In the homo.
Last year almost 40.000 people
wero killed nnd nearly a million
Injured aa a roaull of accldonts,
collisions and othor difficulties
on the highway!.
It la aald that at least 10,000.
0011 people every yoar have accl
donta atifflclently aevero to take
them temporarily from their
work. Tho loss financially may
bo estimated In billions.
Tho total working time lost on
account of accidents In Industry
hns boon estimated nt approxi
mately 250.000.000 working days.
Theao nro some of tho slmplo
figures which Indicate the Im
portance of tho safety program.
They Indicate, moroovor, the
nood for an organization llko tho
National Safety council, which is
holding 111 Chicago a vast con
gross donllng with the necessity
for provontlon of accidents and
for the kind of edttcntlon of the
puhllo that will lower tho coats
of cnrolessnOHB. '
. .
Safety la a habit, as careloss
neas is a habit. Safety means
the avoldnnco of unnecessary
cnroloaanoas or foolish rlBks.
Our world was once much safer
than It I now. Before tho com
ing of mnchliiory, no one wai
disturbed about automobile accl-
State Farm
Insurance
Companies
Auto I.lfo Fir
GHOHOW N. MIIiTjARD,
District Milliliter
New Office
208 Williams Bid.
724 Main
rhono 8041
Home
feuTJ I
rl I ill "1 JTl Livino Pooh J
I btrilOOU. 1 - o,n f
J n4.no' - I '
I 1 '"i
The floor plan of tho Hedforil,
published here, is Interesting In
regard to tho provision for the
hulf-fllghla of atalra. Note the
"down" stairway In tho hall be
tween kitchen and living room.
Thla luuda lo the garage, and util
ity and heating room, which also
has a rear entrance.
Colling heights aro 8 ft. 3 In.
In tho main building; 8 ft. In the
garnxe.
Tho National Plan aervlio glvea
tho cubic ennteuta us 12, Hill cubic
foot. At SVc per cubic foot, this
would make llio whole prlco of
the lledfnrd J3730. At 4Uc per
cubic font (which represents the
very highest quality of construc
tion In uny part ol tho country),
llio price would bo 1 5.000. Thirty
coma per cubic foot, however, la
a belter-than-aYcrago cost In the
1'aclflc northwest. With the prices
nf building malarial down 7 per
cent from what they wero a year
ago, according tn figures released
by tho liuriuu of Labor statistics
for tho month of August, tharo
ura many place In Iho northwest
where simple, amall homos enn bo
built at a cost of ns low aa 20c per
cubic foot. In every locality. Iho
lledlurd will Imvo a great appeal
to the homo-buying public, and la
Ibus a wonderful plan for Invest
ment homo building- particular
ly by small Investor!.
Working pinna and specifica
tion may bo bought through re
tall lumber deulors or through
Western Homos Foundation, 30
Stuart Building, Seattlo.
dents. In a previous generation
people did not die In their homes
from electrical shocks or from
the uso of vibrators, electrical
stovos. electrical sowing machines
or even electric lamps. Workers
did not suffer from contact with
high apeed machine In Industry.
Tho four types of accidents
that cnuso most deaths are those
from automobiles, drowning, fulls
and burns. Moat of the accidents
associated with automobiles,
drowning, falls and burns are
preventable accldonts prevent
able by a little carefulness and
proper Instruction.
In a recont study of accident
rates In the stnto of Kansas, It
was discovered that accidents are
fifth In the causes of death, pre
ceded only by heart disease, can
cer, fcrnln hemorrhage and rhron
lo Inflammation of the kidneys.
We have given careful concern
to these leading causes of death.
There are societies and organ
isations devoted to encouraging
public action against evory one
of them.
The Natlonnl Safety council,
concerned with tho fifth of tho
leading causes of death, deserves
tho support that all of ub must
give it If It work i to be suc
cessful. NEW THOKKSSIOX
Moro than 2000 women through
out the country are now following
a new profession, that of being
interior lighting decorator or
home lighting advisors.
They study tho lighting of
homes, measure It to soe wheth
er It meet standards of sate see
ing and suggest how It can be
mads more attractive and com
fortable to the eye.
A half ton of coal Is required
to start a freight train and bring
It to running speed.
See Us
About a
Lot
Ask Us
About An
Equitable
Loan
Chilcote
& Smith
Hlnco 100l
110 No. Olli Phono 00
APARTMENTS
ON Ml GO
10 OOIi
Purcbaan of the 'Alexandra
apartments, 3012 Main street, was
apartments, 2012 Main street, was
inaiin wbn, with hla sister Kylvla
Kr'lmann nf Fairbanks, Alaska,
acquired tho attractive anven
uparimont atructtiro from tho J.
W. Copelnnil Yard.
Thn dnal was clnand Krlday
morning nnd waa handled by the
Klnmiith Kails branch of tho First
National bank. No consideration
waa given,
Tho Alexandra apartmenta were
built in 1931 by the Mannoa
brothera. The exterior of the
building Is of native rock and the
seven apartments aro modern In
evory detail. Krdmann took pos
session of the apartment house
Krlday. Mlsa Krdmann will not
make hor home In thla city.
Kale of tho old Jory placo, a
400-acre ranch on the Midland
market road In the Spring Lako
district, by Goorge A. DuKaull
lo Dr. Warron Hunt, Klamath
Kails phyaiclan, was announced
Krlday by tho J. K Hoaklng real
estate company. The property Is
nine miles from Klamath Kails
and I all Improved land, It was
stated. Tho conalderatlon was
not given.
Although few largo transac
tions were reported by real estate
doalers throughout tliojclly dur
ing tho past weok, many small
sales were luado and interest In
remodeling amall hoinea, or mod
ernizing other, i prevalent a
check wllh realtor showed.
Lloyd Bates haa purchased a
three-room house at 717 Old Kort
road through the Howard Darn
hlael agency. It was announced.
Kvorott Dennis of the same ag
ency announced the following
transactions which he ha com
pleted thla wock:
Marvin Fosdlck has purchased
a house at 1310 Sargent street
from the stale of Oregon. He
plans to remodel the place Im
mediately, It wu learned.
P. II. iteeder purchased two
hoinea recently, ono amall houso
al 644 Owens street from O. E.
Heeves. and another from the
stale of Oregon at 617 Upbaul
street. Kecder ha made extensive
repairs on tho Owens street pro
perty and plans to do likewise on
tho property purchased from the
Btnte.
Meryl I.oy has purchased a
house at 704 Fulton street from
Mary Yale which be will occupy
Immediately.
John Rogor ha ' purchased a
place In Altumont from Ed Stan
lake, It was learned, the deal com
pleted this week. On the property,
which Include one acre of land,
Is a four-room house which
ltogcrs announced he bad started
lo rcmodol and moderniie.
FUNERAL SERVICES
HELD FOR FORMER
LOCAL RESIDENT
Humphrey Humphrey, for 12
years a resident of Klamath Kalis,
died Sunday at his home in Jos
eph, where he has lived for sev
eral years. Humphrey owned
considerable property In thla city,
which he operated during his resi
dence here,
Servlcca for tho former Klam
ath Falls man were held Wednes
day at 2 p. m. at the Christian
church in Joseph with Rev. Paul
Crambllt of Enterprise, an old
time friend of the family, con
ducting the services.
Humphreys was bom In Ver
mont in 1863 and came west at
an early age. He was married to
Jessie Lathron in Idaho In 1891,
nnd they resided In that state for
26 year. Thoy were the parents
of 13 children, 10 of whom are
living, Including Mr. Ray Daw
son, Mrs. Jim Palmer, Glenn and
Bill Humphrey, all of Klamath
Pall and Mrs. Harvey Oumm of
Happy Camp, Calif.
BUILD
For Less
FIR SPECIALS
Fir
Sheathing
$ goo
Dry
Shiplap
fjtOO
$gOO
$oso
2x4
5 Cress Panel
Doors, from
up
F. R. Hauger
Building Materials For Less
515 Market Phone 1558
Average Cost of Home in U. S.
Drops About $850 in Decade
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 The
average coat of the American
houso thla year la I3C&3, ap
proximately 18.',0 leas than It
was 10 year ago, and yet the
comparison of a 1938 house with
a 1928 model la llko comparing
two automobiles of corresponding
yenra.
This observation was made to
day by Frank t.'arnahan, secre
tary of the National Itc-tull Lum
ber Dealers association, after an
nnalyalB of department of labor
stntlallcB on average house cov
ering the 10-year spun. In 1928,
tho figures show, the average
coat of all types of d-welllnga waa
14407.
"It la estimated," Carnahan
aald, that today's home buyer
gots from 2D to 40 per cent more
house for the money today than
ever before. This can readily be
appreciated when consideration is
given Iho advances in design, con
struction, equipment, tho lin
provement In quality of materi
als and the reduction in limine
Ing costs that have taken place
during tho past decade.
"Architects, housing engineer
and buildera have devoted years
to perfecting living accommoda
tion for Americans, and the re
sult Is a home designed with
Unusual Beauty and Value
LIBRARY PROJECT
SUPERVISOR HERE ri
I Uo Roe rfl TA
Anne Mulheron of Portland.
supervisor of statewide library
projects under PA, was a
visitor Krlday at tho Klamath
county library. She Btated she
is greatly satisfied with this type
of work being done by county
libraries and that she was glad
to find the library here using
WPA helpers to such good ad
vantage. The supervisor said that it was
quite evident that the Klamath
county library does not have suf
ficient funds for an adequate
staff and as long as WPA is in
existence her organization is glad
to bo of help. She pointed out,
however, that as long as tbe
WPA is an emergency measure it
is Impossible to count on its be
ing permanent and that this
type of work done by the women
necessarily takes the nature of
odd Jobs. Howover, tho typo of
work being done by the library
will presuppose a much larger
staff than tbe library has, she
stated.
Mis Mulheron discussed with
Mary McComb. the librarian, the
possibility of WPA assistance for
some of the larger branch 11'
braries In tbe county and ex
pressed her willingness to keep
such a project In mind If there
are satisfactory certifications In
these districts.
"Busy" beavers have to keep
busy. If not kept short by
gnawing, the teeth would grow
so long that the animal could
not close their mouths.
SMART PEOPLE GET
READY NOW
to ENJOY Winter!
REMODELING and REPAIRING
NOW ,
will give you that smug, "on top" feeling of
enjoyment In your home when winter comes
. and you pay the small monthly cost under
our streamlined F. H. A. Loans without a chill.
SWAN LAKE
MOULDING CO.
Phone 759
minimum of waste apace, made
livable and utilitarian In every
respect, and enhnncod In attrac
tiveness.
"The federal government, too,
has been Instrumental In better
ing housing standard, largely
through the minimum construc
tion and plan requirement Bet
up under the federal houalng ad
ministration's mortgage Insur
ance plan. The drop In financing
costs, too, can largely be attribut
ed to government effort, which
made possible 80 and 90 per
cent loans, fully amortized over
20 and 25-year periods."
The secretary of the building
supplier organization, which rep
resent 23,000 local dealer In
building material all over the
United Stales, urged home own-
era to Investigate Improvement
In housing with a view to either
modernizing their existing home
or building new ones.
"Your bom e," Carnahan
serted, "la more Important to
you than your automobile, and
yet betterment of houalng all too
often Is pushed aside in favor of
trading in the family car on a
new one. Housing Is making the
same kind of progres that the
automobile la that means your
1928 bouse 1 Juat as outmoded
as your car of the same year.
e4
THE SOUTHHOLD Plan and
specifications can be obtained
from your local lumber dealer
through National Plana Service,
Inc., Chicago, 111.
fiair Fioo.
This home, because of It beau
tiful styling, brick first floor and
built-in garage, seems much more
expensive than It really la. Most
families will find this a home
that Is not only economical, -but
1 also well-built and entirely at
Isfactory In every respect.
BETTER HEAT
"Better heating aeaaon" I at
hand, and the prudent household
will make careful plan for com
fort all through the winter, advise
Iron Fireman engineer. The
heating plant should be checked
over before being tlred-up, and
modern auxiliary equipment In
stalled. Most emerald are produced In
Colombia.
South 6th St.
B! ii i "1 -ljiiwv
Q
. StCQMB I U
fLOOR.
ffi Online Doom "Kiuurrl
5 rTuvrna aooa k
PERMITS FOR
MONTH TOTAL"
OVER $34100
In September 27 building per
mits wero Issued here totaling
$36,440. During September, 1937,
35 permits were Issued totaling
$57,650, It waa ahown.
Permit were Issued for the
following purpose: garages, 2,
total, $265; new residences, 5,
$27,300; residential alterations
9, total, $2,645; non-resldentlal
now, 3, $3,740; non-resldentlal
alterations, (, $1890; repair one
school roof, $150; repair city
library roof $450, total, 27 per
mits, $36,440..
A year ago, for tbe aame month
five new homes were also put un
der construction, but their com'
bined coat waa but $18,000, com
pared with $27,300 for the five
new 1938 homes. Permit total
were upped a year ago when busi
ness house alteration totaled
$33,640 a compared to $1890 for
September, 1938.
ON WEAK SPOTS
Because escaping heat follow
the line of least resistance, the
home builder must carefully elim
inate weak spots In Insulation
continuity.
Weak spots In the insulation
area serve a sieve for beat, nrnk
ing the remaining Insulation prac
tically valueless, they report.
Crucial point In the malnten
ance of insulation continuity are
the ceiling edges of the Installa
tion. If the Insulation Is permit'
ted to creep or "settle," the cell
ing edge will be an open avenue
for escaping heat.
By nailing Insulation boards
of the "colorkote" type securely
to walls and ceilings, positive pro
tection against weak spots can be
obtained, it is said.
OF DJIilGEf! ZONES
From tbe butcher to the baker
to the modern candlestock-maker,
our lives are affected by measur
ing instruments. Among the new
est of the measuring tools la a
light meter, an instrument ao
small that It can be slipped Into
a men's vest pocket.
It Is used to measure light at
school desks, easy chairs tn the
home or at the factory bench.
When light falls on the light
sensitive cell of the meter it causes
a needle to register the number
of units of Illumination at a given
location. When the needle point
to a read "danger zone" on the
dial, the light is Insufficient for
reading or sewing.
NOW IS TIME FOR
HEATING REPAIRS
Have little repairs to the heat
ing plant made now and avoid
big repair bills later. This Is tbe
advice offered by the Plumbing
and Heating Industries bureau in
oUzQnaHclma
WHAT SHE THINKS OF JOHNS-MANVILIE
ROCK WOOL HOME INSULATION
Furnished in factory made
"Batts" of correct thickness
and density. Easily install
ed. Insist on the name Johna-Manville.
i
BIG BASIN
Lumber Co.
Main and Spring
connection with the "Ready for
Winter" campaign of the federal
houalng administration.
A careful Inspection of Ihe
heating plant now will Bataguard
the homo-owner agalnat the dan
ger of a breakdown In the middle
of winter, the bureau points out.
It la important to (tart the
heating aeaaon with a clean
bollor. Many heating contractor!
are equipped with a vacuum aya-
tem for cleaning aoot and fly-sab.
from boiler flue.
MS 6 ESSENTIALS
The "livable" bedroom ha alt
essentials, according to a Modern
Home Institute report.
The requisites are an open
fireplace, a really "easy" chair,
a reading lamp, a comfortable
bed, adequate drawer apace and
a good vanity for make-up, the
Institute says.
'When these six thing are
supplied, then the bedroom ' be
come more than a cell for deep
ing. It become one of the moat
important room in tbe bouse.
'A 'livable' bedroom can be
one of a home' greatest asaeta
a comfortable retreat."
New artistry has been Intro
duced Into home by popularise
tlon of modern design In architec
tural background and In furni
ture. Typical of the modern move
ment I the New Yorker dealgn
In bedroom furniture, with clean,
smooth line. .
RELATIVES WRITE t -LOCAL
RESIDENTS '
OF STORM HAVOC
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Dennis ot
Pine street have received letter
from relativea in Massachusetts
describing the terrlfio storm that
recently ravaged the New Eng
land coast. -
One letter waa from a slater of
Mr. Dennis, Mr a. Bessie Hill,
who wrote that she waa alone in
her home at Worcester, Mass.,
when the storm hit, taking off
part of the roof, breaking nearly
every window In tbe house end
turning the yard- Into a shamble.
She was uninjured. - . .
Mrs. Hill enclosed a letter from
a cousin of - Dennis, who live
near Providence, R. I. This
cousin told of her buaband bare
ly escaping from a flood of water
that swept through the street.
Upon reaching higher gronnd he
looked .back in time to see ft
large bus covered by the water.
It waa in thle diatrict that per
sons were drowned In their ears.
She wrote of watching six-foot
breakers covering their hex Held
and of tbe hearse waiting in
their driveway for the bodies of
14 persons drowned on Barring
ton beach. ' ;
Mr a. Dennis has two brothers
living at another point where the
storm struck heavily, from, whom
she has not yet had word.
GROOVINO
A simple operation with ft
grooving tool will transform the
appearance of a room whch Is
being finished with color Insula
tion .panels. Simple grooves or
patterns may be cut Into the pan
els. The natural tan color of the
board will show through, provid
ing contrast with the colored sur
face. KLAMATH COUNTY
ABSTRACT CO.
Abstracts Title Insurance
- Escrows
ELBERT a VEATOH
111 So. Fourth St. Phone IS
It is inexcusable to live in cold drafty
house in winter. Johns-Manvilla Rock Wool
keeps beat in makes rooms warmer and
cozier, saves up to 30 in fuel. In summer
rooms are up to 15 cooler in hottest weather.
i
It amtalaa aoaaaa ml
atlwaiHillaaj iosa an
will Snabdpfal.. M
Fhone 107