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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1945)
-Out. IIUIOTERS OF URISTTRAD E EET IN SALEM LEM. Juno 15 (!) Eighty icntiitlvos of cliambor of crco, advertising clubs, .,( ulr linen, oil coin- "hotel and tonrlat purk litlons, mcctlnK horo today t cull of Governor Eurl to mop a plan for promo- ori'Kon's tourist Liuhiiiosk InimcHlnto postwar years, Hint Uiey ulrendy have t in the bank for ono form crtlnlnK. lcr W. R. May, OrcKon : publisher, notified the (hut monies raised by u pommlttco of Orouon ilssincn In 1041 for conlln of the Frank Branch Riley ntccl lecture tours were rl and will bo available) for .11.1 nnl n,f ...hllt money had been collected ici. of It as "substantial.' ill opened tho session by til out that In normal years n' tourist business Sited In $50,000,000 an L "This can easily be fc'd perhaps I should suy mo govcrimr muni- gon's "scenic grandeur un- kicri, ner cnmaie, iisnniR Silghwnys make the state In nttractlve to tho modern It as It was to the pioneer I davs of the covered wagon, Jen Pangborn, Portland, enl of Oregon advertising, mimnri bv Sncll to Ins temporary chairman of roup, wnose memours in kl they would set up u Jnciit organization this loon. I Malin . I and Mrs. George Pater- inlcm. wero lecent guests !. and Mrs. Vaclav Kalina. I'osvar, i-inmiuon uuy, Carrlo Purlcc, Shasta and Lillian Thornton, California, who were hero bv tho sudden death jtlr brother-in-law, Robert HI, nuvo rciurncu 10 uiuir 0. They wore guests while lot their mother, Katie , and their sisters, Irene , Mrs. William llalousck (rs. Carl Taylor, and other ilea. hon of Mrs. Spolck, Pvt. iSpoIck, who suffered an Id knee while serving with 1. S. Infantry In Germany, bcctcil homo in tho near I. He has been in tho serv- Ir about three years, serv Drat in - Greenland, .before fto Europe. E. Curry of Curry's Music I, Klnmnlh Falls, is organ la school band in Malin. is arc being held each Joy and Wednesday in the ucnooi Evmnnsium wun ao ten of both elementary and school ago registered.. The has had no band lor scv- fenrs. !; Old Times lace, Marshall SHINGTON, Juno 15 VP) pic of hunters talked over ti'.cs on the Columbia river nay. r Wallace, Oregon demo national committeeman, cd from a visit with Gen. c Marshall, saying his old never looked better. i had a fine visit," Wallace "The general wanted to ticmbered to his friends In nd, especially Gen. Charles finin, tho former Oregon lor. n. Marshall said he wished fold come out for another t8 trip." Crew Saved When Plane Crashes in Flames - , j,t " 7. rt vr , , t, (NEA Ttlephmot Placing himself between flier and flames, an asbestos-clad firefighter frees pilot from cockpit of blazing plana after it crushed on deck of Essex class "irrlcr in Pacific. The gunner, second man In plane, already has es caped. U, 8. Navy photo. MIDLAND WIRE 1WS Tulelake Opening of the Tulelake Growers' migratory labor camp is being held up until beds or dered from Scuttle arrive, it Is announced by Chester Main, president of the Growers'. Mr, and Mrs. Irving Capck left Tuesday night to fish in Diamond lake for a day or two. Capck is manager of a local gas station. Believed to be the first Nisei casualty from tho Tulelake cen ter in the Okinawa campaign is T4 Mitsuru Shibata, who was killed April 23, according to word received from the war department by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kakuichl Shibata. The farm section of the Tule lake Japanese compound has harvested 24,570 pounds of spring vegetables and this week lias completed seeding a large portion of the 1300 acres being used by the camp this yciir. 23,520 pounds of green onions and 1050 pounds of radishes have been pulled. Other crops planted include 150 acres of potatoes, 22 onions, 16 radishes, 12 gobo and 10 of nnppo. The livestock unit produced and delivered 41,285 pounds of dressed pork, 4178 pounds of sausage and 10,030 of lard to tho mess operations. Five hundred fifty-seven hogs were bought during May, bring ing the total number on hand to 1362. Merrill Sisters Rcgina Francis and Imclda Joseph, both of Port land, and Sister Elcanora, Wus co, Calif., are teaching during tho two weeks' summer school in St. Augustine's church which opened classes Monday morn ing. Religious study courses and arts and handicraft are being offered to 75 students ranging from the first to the eighth grade. Students from Merrill, Malin, Tulelake and Bonanza arc uttcndlng. The classes will close June 22. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hcaton have as guests Heaton's father, M. W. Hcaton, Willows, Calif., and his two sisters, Bonnie and Ardcll of Rlpon, Calif. Private motorists of Great Britain consume 700,000,000 gal lons of gasoline in a normal year. tonus For Dad On His Day Sunday, June 17 All Wool Rayon Washable Terry Cloth HURRY! ifff IWV Farher'i Day Lj! M Ml . Sunday. ... " ' f W?P (1 - 600 Main New Pine Creek The Grange benefit bond dance held last Saturday night was well attended and proved to be a social and financial suc cess, considering the number of dances held in the valley on that same night. Around $132 was grossed on the dance and sup per and about $85 was cleared after expenses were paid. The money will be used to purchase bonds. Lillian Reid drove her hus band, Evert Held, to a Portland clinic last week, where he was to undergo a series of treatments for arthritis. They planned to be gone about two weeks. Sgt. J. T. McDonald returned last Thursday to Fort Riley, Kan., where he has been sta tioned for some time. He was home, accompanied by his wife Dorothy, on a short emergency leave. Mrs. McDonald stayed home to take care of things dur ing the absence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Evert Reid. Raymond Cook returned home last Saturday evening on a 30 day furlough from Ascension Is land where he has been stationed for nearly two years. He was glad to be home and thinks that he will, not be returned to his former station but does not know just where he will be sent at tho expiration of his furlough. Marvin Butler, who has been stationed on Attu for the past 18 months, is enjoying a fur lough with his parents, relatives Flashes of Life and friends. He also has a 30 day furlough and then thinks he will be stationed near Oak land. Jasper Boyer, who has also been in the Seabees and sta tioned at Attu where Marvin Butler has been, is on a 30-day furlough and is staying at the Partin ranch. He is enjoying his visit, doing some .fishing, and both he and Marvin attended the bond dance held last Saturday night. He expects to be stationed near Oakland also. . The Happy Hour club met June 5 with Mrs. Amy Cloud. Eleven members and two guests, Ethel Anderson and daughter, Ramona, of Willow Ranch, were present. Alice Alien won nigh prize and Ramona Anderson won low. The club will meet June 10 with Clara Cloud. Jennie L. Faris left last Tues day for her home in Caldwell, Ida., after spending about three weeks here visiting with rela tives. Buela Robertson and daugh ter, Nadine Boomer, left last week for Illinois where they will visit for a time. Roscoe Shaw is also visiting at Jersey vllle, 111. Mr. and Mrs. John Tllson and family have moved back into their home here after having spent the winter at Davis Creek. Tllson is now busy getting his garden In. Hazel Vlnyard will resume her work on June 16 at the Lakeview selective service of fi :e. , Mrs. Clyde Waltz, son Doug las and daughters, Clydene and Marilyn, and her mother, Mrs. Price Blackford, one of the early pioneers of her section, are here visiting for a weelc with Mr. TARRED SALT LAKE CITY, June 15 (JP) It was a tar-ry mess. Phillip Sylvester, 11, and a pet goat were wandering across a vacant lot. They came upon a trench filled with tar await ing use in a nearby Davlne m-o- ject. Phil jumped, the goat re- lusect, ana ine rope unking tne two jerked the boy squarely In to the trench. The goat followed. Jim Oviatt. 17, working near- Dy, punea fmi out put it took six men prying with boards and sticks to get Nanny loose, NEARLY SUNK ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., June 15 VP) Weldon Ownes signed on the wrong dotted line and technically became the- bride groom instead of the witness at a wedding. A district court order permit ted the county clerk- to correct tne error. RESULTS SALT LAKE CITY, June 15 (JF) George White went to a fortune teller's booth at a sub urban carnival. After he left, he told police, what little fortune he had with him In his wallet was miss ing. HUSSY SALT LAKE CITY, June 15 (JP) Venus is getting Junius J. Haynes down. After the University of Utah astronomy instructor had re ceived several phone calls ask ing "What's that star doing out in the sunshine?" He called a newspaper to explain It is en. tlrely possible to see the planet venus during ine aay. WHIZ DENVER. June 15 UP) Sec ond Sgt. Hector Felipe Jimlnez Rubio, a Mexican army man at tached to Lowry field, won the title of the Typewriter Tornado because he types 120 words per minute in English, a language ne can i reaa. He likes his temporary as. signment but: "The English, she has too many verbs, and I have had too much the KP, he complained. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, In New York City, displays triangular loaves of bread baked in ancient Thebes 3500 years ago. and Mrs. Earl Sanford and fam ily. They are from Wheatland. Calif, and expected to return about the middle of the week. Watermaster A. S. Wheeler of Alturas, who makes weekly check-ups on the creeks in his territory, says that anyone need ing extra water from Pine creek is at liberty to use same as the stream is running 700 inches of excess water. Eleven hundred inches is sufficient to satisfy rights to all on the creek which is now flowing 1800 inches. GETS TRANSFER Capt. V. S. Armstrong, medi cal corps, U. S. navy, and senior medical officer of the naval air bases of the 13th naval district with headquarters at Seattle, Is now under orders to command the naval hospital at San Juan, Puerto Rico. Armstrong is being relieved by Capt. J.R. Toppen, medical corps, U. S. navy, who has re ported from the naval air train ing bases at Corpus Chrlsti, Tex., and arrived at the air sta tion late Thursday afternoon.. Capt. Armstrong and Capt. Toppen are making an inspec tion of the medical departments of the air bases In the entire district. Halfbreed Woman Killed, Mutilated PORTLAND, June 15 (JP) Police today investigated the killing of a halfbreed woman about 40 years old, whose body mutilated with a double-bitted ax was found yesterday In her home. The woman; Ina May Black well, had been dead about two days, officers estimated. A neighbor who noticed a light constantly burning called police. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OP SALE Notic 1 hereby given that the under signed, Vera L. Chase, adminlitratrlx of the estate of Frank H. Day, deceased, gursuant to an order of the Circuit ourt of the State of Oregon, for Klam ath County, Oregon, made and entered May 19, 1645, will, on and after the 10th day of June, 1843, sell at private salt to the highest bidder for cash in hand, all of the right, title and interest owned and possessed by said decedent at the time of bis death In and to the following described real property to wit: Lot 11. Block 208, Mills Second Ad , dltion to the city of Klamath Falls, Oregon, Dated this 17th day of May, IMS. " Administratrix of the Estate of Frantt h. Day, aiso Known aa F. U. Day, deceased. M. 18-23; J. l-a-15 No. 106. Mora btautiful than vtri : i h t 'a. W " 6!pJ ' fc" CfPr dork to 3 oz. botll,, 1.00 AhrvMt 50 polra In ri U oi. cmmyriM, 100 So tasy to apply end qutclc to dry, Elizabeth Arden's lag maka-up stays on the legs and off tho clothes. Water-resistant. Clings, until deliberately washed away, with a blemish' concealing sheer textured beauty that trims tho ankle slims tho leg. Bo lure to wear Velva leg Film with bathing suit or shorts. It makes your legs look sun-burnished ; i far more lovelyt U33( ... frggraM man Itwt rmevM heir eef km, Joe. toil satin meets, WO rtt ,1m mm 11 OEMS NOTICE Notlea la herebv aiven that tho under signed has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Oscar Sloan Campbell, aeceasea, Dy me uircim court oz iuanv ath County, Oregon. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby re. a ulrcd to nreaent same. Dronerly veri fied, to me at the office of H. C. Mer ry man. 203 L O. O F. Building, Klam ath Falls, Oregon, within six months from date hereof. Dated May 24th, 1B4B. AUBREY R. CAMPBELL. . Administrator aa aforesaid. M2S; J1-8-1&-22. No. 114. Friday, Jun 15, 1945 HERALD AND 1TCWS IONS 7 Risismu OPTOMETRISTS Dr. SM O. Nolc. Dr. eu a kou tt. Dr. O. i. Httet (14. V. s. Arari Dr. D. 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