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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1945)
EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS Thursday. September 13. 194S I OUR BOARDING HOUSC with MAJOR HOOPLI OUT OUR WAY IY J. R. WILLIAMS T PARTIAL RELIEF FOR USING PROBLEMS SEEN Partial relief from housing problems In Klamath Falls is in sight, with acceptance yesterday 01 two finished housing projects by the federal public housing authority. These two projects, the 155- I unit navy project on Washburn way, and the 50-unit civilian project on Main, have been under construction for the past i few months, and are now ready to receive tenants, Harry I Gamble, project engineer stated I today. : When the projects are filled, f it is expected some relief will ! come to those unable to get gov- I crnment housing. i Project Delay i The navy project has been de- layed because of some fixtures i which have now been obtained, I and because of incomplete ar- rangements for sewer facilities. I The city has received word of t government appropriations for sewer improvements and the council has granted permission i lor temporary hook-up to exist i ing mains. " Lawns have been planted at tne navy project ana are coming i along fine. Apartments have been assigned, and tenants are expected to move in this week , end. 29 Accepted Twenty-nine of the 50 civilian ; units were accepted last night. The remaining units will be ac cepted as soon as available. The entire site will be finished by the end of the month, including grading, roads and so forth. This project overlooks Klamath basin, and has convenient access to stores and schools across the canal. A foot-bridge has been constructed at this point across the canal to serve the project. Man Fractures Skull In Auto Accident Earl W.. Hilton, 2333 Apple gate, is in an Ashland hospital suffering from a fractured skull and possible back injuries re ceived in an automobile acci dent Sunday near Klamath junc . tion. ;- Hilton and Marion Miller, driver of the car, were on their way to Ashland when the acci dent happened. Miller received minor cuts and bruises and was badly shaken. WEATHER Wednesday, September 1?, IMS Eugene Klamath Falls . max. hid. irectp. -.93 -101 37 ' Sacramento North Bend Portland Reno San Frantisco Seattle 51 54 73 Mediord t Red Bluff Washington Tog on coast, otherwise clear today and tonight. Friday in creasing cloudiness. Slightly cooler Portland to Bellingham Friday. Gentle northwest winds off coast. Oregon Clear today and tonight but fog on coatL Friday increasing cloud iness. Slightly cooler today near Port land and from Med ford to Portland. Friday . gentle northwest winds off Coast. VITAL STATISTICS JOHNSON Bom at Klamath Valley hoiplul. Klamath rails. Ore. on Sep tember 12, 1945, to Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Johiuon, Malta, a girl. Weight: 7 pounds 13 ounces. REDOICK Born at Klamath Valley hospital, Klamath Falls, Ore., on Sep tember. 12, 1945, to Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Reddick. IS Warring, a boy.. Weight; 6 pounds 44 ounces. - M'CAULLEY Born at Hillside hos pital. Klamath Falls. Ore., on September 2. IMS, to Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Mc Caulley. 4230 Austin, a girl. Weight: a pounds 13l ounces. - "WHiN I SAY COTftt RADIO REPAIR Br Expert Technicians GOOD STOCK OP AVAILABLE TUBES-PARTS-AERIALS Toi AU Mekei of Radios ZEMAN'S a We buy, sell and trade radios Quick, Guaranteed Service N. 9th Phone 7522 i Acres From Montgomery Ward en North Stk Eugene Council Has Building Problems EUGENE, Sept. 13 (P The city council Is faced with two construction problems. No bids were received for construction of sewers in the southeast part of town, and the project will have to be adver tised again. City Manager Deane Sccger told the council recently that the city's swimming pool, for which $65,000 has been set aside, will not be built until construction costs are lowered. 2 MEN ARRAIGNED James Phillips, 38, negro, ap peared in circuit court this morning oeiore juage uavia n. Vandenberg cnarged with grand larceny. Phillips had indicated that he wished to plead gumy to the charge, but after hearing his statement, the court changed the plea to not guilty and ap pointed J. C. O'Neill to repre sent the defendant. It is alleged that Phillips stole property valued at $42.50 from M. R. Graham at Chiloquin on September 3. Phillips claimed in court this morning that he pur chased some of the stolen prop erty and that the remainder was loaned to him by Graham. He said he was instructed by Gra ham to trade one of the articles and was merely following in structions. Phillips was employed by Graham at a service station at Chiloquin. He is being held in the county jail in lieu of $2500 bond. Leslie Phillips Jr., negro, waived grand jury indictment before Judge Vandenberg this morning on a charge ot grana larcenv. The court appointed A. C. Yaden to represent the de fendant and entry of plea in the case was set for Saturday, Sep tember 15, at 10 a. m. Phillips allezedly stole seven 100-pound sacks of clover seed from W. B. Graham on Septem ber 2. The property was valued at S94.50 and was recovered. The defendant was committed to the county jail in lieu ot $2500 bond. 47 Marines Arrive At Local Barracks Fortvseven marines from the naval drydocks in San Francisco arrived at the Marine Barracks Wednesday and will be stationed here for the present. These men, all combat veterans, are only re cently returned from duty - on Okinawa and Iwo Jima. - Twenty men from Sun Valley, Ida., are expected to arrive at the tiarracics some lime inurs- day. SEARCH FOR CHILD VANCOUVER. B. C. Sept. 13 (CP) Vancouver's entire police force was called in today to watch for traces of 4-year-old Dianne Blunt who has been missing from her home here since early Tuesday afternoon. School students and soldiers from the nearby Hastings Park encampment are assisting in the search. . Special Show There will be a Sing, Swing and Talent show Thursday night at 8 o'clock at the USO. Marjorie Ongman will be the hostess and appearing on ine program will be Marianne Lion who will sing accompanied Dy marjorie .crazier at the piano. I MAN POLOEX'Sl' t V(27 NEU.,U0r OLD OrA? VOUR STEED U&D 5 A BkRNtY'S EWifJ' , V BLMCrAKOFF'S CLCVrtOSlsYTv A A6MN.'1rV6W&U.N ) -1T MefNS TeeTH A 16 GONE FffOfA WIS M TOO TIGHT TOGETHER. f EER Y j HrVppy as a, kid V filed sPAce T oo call ;': WATCHING A SCHOOL" V SETVOEE TUErA )) HIS BLUFF- I HOUSE FIRE? J I --HAR.RUrAPH.'( HE'S SOT V' WHAT DID VOOSAV H, ACES , J HIS AILMENT WAS, 1 Ir""" I 6ACKED ' . llllll. HIRE MEWS Fort Klamath Fort Klamath visitors over the Labor Day weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Knott of Los Angeles, the latter a sister of the Z u m b r u n boys of Fort Klamath. Following their visit here, Mr. and Mrs. Knott left for Roseburg, where they plan to make their home. Sgt. Delbert Denton. USMC, left last week to report for duty at San Diego, Calif., following a 30-day furlough spent here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. r rank Denton. Capt. Alfred B. Castcl Jr., of the army air corps, also left last week after enjoying a 30-day leave, reporting at Santa Ana, Calif., for further orders. Mr. and Mrs. Guss Page and Sgt. Carl Fisher, USMC, spent Sunday on a trip to Diamond lake. Sgt. Fisher, who was for merly stationed here at the ski camp established for the ma tines, is now on duty at the rec reation camp at Crescent lake. George Zumbrun has arrived in Fort Klamath where he will make his home with his brother, Emil. He has been employed at Springfield, Ore. ' Dan Savage of Merced, Calif., was a guest here Sunday night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Alfred B. Castel Sr. He left Monday morning on a busi ness trip to the Willamette val ley, and will stop here again on the return trip. Mr. and Mrs. Savage lived here for many years before moving to Merced to make t h e ,i r home several years ago. The regular meeting of the C. I. club was held Friday after noon, with many members pres ent. Routine business was trans acted during the meeting, and refreshments were served at the close of the afternoon by Mrs. Ira Orem and Mrs. Anna Stra han, hostesses for the meeting. Alfred B. Castel Sr. returned home Tuesday night from a bus iness trip to Medford and Klam ath Falls. Tuesday visitors in Klamath Falls included Charles J. Bricco and son-in-law, Marvin Roeder. Heriza and Drew expect to complete their logging opera tions on the west side this week. Hauling of logs from the woods was completed Wednesday, and work of cleaning up is expected to be finished in about a week. FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth have Buf fered real embarrassment because their Jilate dropped, slipped or wabbled at ust the wronr time. Do not live in fear of this happening to you. Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH, the alka line 'non-aeldi powder, on your plates. Holds false teeth more firmly, so they feel more comfortable. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture breath;. Get FASTEETH at any draff store. ROW SHE SHOPS "CASH AND CARST Without Painful Bckch Many sufferers teller earring baeksena nuickir, once they discover that the real cause or tneir trouble nay be tired kidneys. Tbe kidneys are Nature' chief way of tak ing the excess acids and waste out of the blood. They help most people paja about S pints a day. When disorder of Iddncr function permits poisonous matter to remain In your blood, It Mycausenacgingbackacbe.rbeumaticpaini, left Pains, loss of pep and eneifry, getting up nights, swelling, puffin ei under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning some, times shows there (s something; wrong with your kidneys Or bladder. Don't waftl Ask your druggist for Doan's Pills, a stimulant diuretic, used snceeaif oily by millions for orer 40 years. Doan's g!v nappy relief and will help the 16 miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Uoan'a Pais. Relieve that Tormenting Pltl-IVORM ITCH Too Embarrassing to Talk About. Tt Is no lenrl ueeassarr to pqfc up wilb tat trouM. eaoiad br Pio-Worois t A hlehlr effeetlv. war to dsst with this Vf Ir infection baa now bn mad poislnle. It fa based on the medically reeoirnlxed drug known as frentlan violet. Tbis special drug fa the vital Ingredient In P-W. th l'ln-Worm tablets developed In the labora. torlea ot Dr. D. Jayne A tion. Tba small, casv.to-tnke P-W tablets act In a special way to remove Pin-Worms. Ho don't take chances with the embarrassing rectal Itch and other distress caused br these creatures that live and flxow Inside me naman body, ir you suspect rin.worms In your child or yourself, grt a hoi of JAYNI'S P-W right away and follow tha directions. Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back. Tour druggist know, I P-W for Pin-Wonu t Mrs. Harold Wimer has re ceived word from her son, Cpl. Raymond E. Van Wormer, that he expects to be redeployed to the United States, September 3. He has been on Okinawa since April 1, and is a veteran of the Aleutian, Kwajalien and Leyte campaigns also. He will be sent tc Fort Lewis. Wash., for dis charge from the service, and then expects to make a plane trip to join his wife at Fort Ord, Calif., where she has been employed in the army post ex change office during her hus band's absence. The couple will visit here soon. Frank Edwards, who is also employed here by the state high- Zenith Radionic Hearing Aid $5 Down $5 a Month America's finest, low-priced hearing aldl Iff all ready to wear, with Neutral color ear phone and cord. Crystal microphone, Radionic tubes. Batteries. ''7'? w Merrill Mrs. Thomas W. Chatburn Sr. has with her as a guest of Iter mother, Mrs. Otto N e u man. Reedsport. Mrs. Neuman U here to greet her new great grandson, John William Chatburn. son of Sgt. and Mrs- Thomas W. Chat burn Jr. born at a Klamath Falls hospital. September 5. He weighed 10 pounds, li ounces. The little boy's maternal grand parents are Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Hodges, Merrill, and he has three great-grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Chatburn have one other child, a son, Thomas W. Mrs. Carl Lyon underwent a lonsilectomy Tuesday morning. Sgt- Robert L. Lyon, who has way, is ill at his home in Fort Klamath. Ival Knox is now employed on the local patrol of the Ore gon state highway. if (33 (SSJmjXS IP (BUT HO t3 If i , r- ' ' ? .1 $ 40 COMPLETE Some Models $50 PEAP ,)V AtMOST ?S5 ' 'THE COMEBACK been hero on furlough, left Wed nesday for Fort Lewis. He ex pects to bo discharged In the near future after being in the service four years. He saw ser vice in the Aleutian campaign and had eight months In Ger many. Ho has beon a guest In the home of his brothers, Louis of Malin and Carl of Merrill. Molin Charles Wilson, brother of P. G. and Ken Wilson, his wife and two children, Connie and David, of Portland, have been recent guests here. Joyce Thome and Mrs. Lloyd Derby, Klamath Falls, were vis itors at tho home of Mrs. Thomo's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Jess- Whitlatch, Thursday eve ning. Mr- and Mrs. Whitlatch have with them also this week their son, Verne. Klamath Falls. Darwin Cizck, Alexandria, ufl)fl STAMPDB IT MUST OP THB V 88 ID I AklAMORNft.' I 5CAB6 A A TOUCH O' MAN WHO'S nji i nilA QCPkJ'IM PAST REAL ONES 't HOSS AN OV TK-r-7 nys, RIDER DOWN I SNORIN' LAx V nwltm unyHI. me. f. n Mft m W, La., Is a guest of the Fablanok family, vLsltlng with his futhcr-in-law, John Fablnnek, and his brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Joe and George Fnblimek, and Mrs. Ken Wilson. OBSOLETE WHEN BUILT. It look 47 years to build the original USS Alabama, at Ports mouth, N. H. It was already ob solete when It was launched in 1887.. Classified Ads Bring Results. QUINTS' atwai rellev. coughing ol CHEST COLDS WITH GKl niwv. If your igit Is faulty, you art not efficient. You work slowly, Inaccurate ly and risk Occidents. The way to as sure yourself of the peak of visual efficiency is to have the proper eye care at Standard Optical Company, for years the West's outstanding man ufacturing and Dispensing Opticians. HAVE A COMPLETE EYE - EXAMINATION NOW! BtifltiU, DR. BYRON FRIEDMAN, optometrist WEST'S LARGEST MANUFACTURING AND DISPENSING OPTICIAN! 715 Main Street in Klamath Falls IS Construction activities al Hie Murine Uiirracks are moving nluug nt a rapid rmue with woife being started last week on the second l my of Ilia front and vcntur wums of the ndiiilnlstra tlon building nt tho post and Several oilier projects being worknd on nt thn present tlmo, The additional space In tho ad ministration building will house two conference rooms and 13 of fices when coiuplotod, A two-atory warehouse and a SU-innn brig are also being built In addition to another hospital ward two storltis high. A I'X restaurant Is also on the list of building projects for the I) nr. rucks. The now buildings will nils thu total on the iiosl to 00. Lnndst'iiplug of the grounds around the dlsiieusnry unci the administration building and the I'X Is being done now unci lawns around the Unrracks lira bring plantud by the men of tho vari ous companies. Men, Women! Old at 40,50,60! WantPep? Want to Fttl Ysars Youngir? Jie rMi hlaiM tttaiuixj, enfft-nm tieitni Mt ST l.miMili ti4 kt ttt S liliMwiH! us vtii Mir I h.i in. I iskUlpj ! f ( al ily, tO, 0, ( tad' M uMf heXatjM law In r site nii'Pliw fiiajttia Hi. atrtam, tit-viti;Mi 3i in. VMnoiMr w "!" r Tutus tbitu (or m txp. ftxtQim tliK, tku vm- M rut slttrvt trryB r--lt. Klamath falls, at Ha lima Or mi ait 4 Walgrtaa'a, Cold Wava Permanentl So euy to do right at home I Soft, natural-looking outs. Ait for Crowning Glory , , , l ' "" (wis arlwl Waggoner 2( DRUG CO. 9th & Main Cjuaianteed