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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1946)
Lie Named Candidate To UNO Post LONDON, Jnn. 2D (I1) Trygvo Liu. a eurnentar'i Don ' wlio became Norway's foreign nilnlHtur, tonight was nominated secretin y-goncMiil of the Unltoil Nations, The storky 60-year-old luw-yer-dlplomat win aelucted u a compromise candidate for the $20,U()0-u yi'iir post niter a sesj viuii ui mn iivu pi mi'iijiu kiw rr representative In the hotel room of U. S. Delegate Edward n, Stolllnlua Jr., last night, Previously tho Amorlcuns had backed Lester 1'earson, Canadl un itinbiiniiclor In Wushlngton, while ItuHnlu had boen support inn Lie. In the tense dispute between Russia and Iran, representa tives of the two countrlui were expected to ineut today to seek a solution of that controversy. Ohstucles to the agreement on a sucroliiry-gcncrMi mostly wero worked out at a five-pow er meeting hist nlxht In the Imlcl rnoin of Edward It, Slot tlnlus Jr., chief U. S. delegate. Aiithorltntlvo Inform atlon whs tt in t tho United States sud denly gave up Its advocacy of Lester I'earson, Canadian am bassador to washtiiKion, ana .Stetllnlus formally proposed Lie us a compromise who mlifht be ucccpUililo to uio uimeu Ktutoa, llritaln and liussla, Candidate The SO-yoar-old Norwegian lawyer-diplomat was Moscow's candidate for president of the UNO, but lost to raui-nenri Spunk, foreign mlmstor of Bui iiium In later balloting. A United Stales proposal to set up an 11 -member committee to seek further contributions to UNHKA from United Nations members was adopted unani mously by tho assembly's social and luimunlturlan committee after a Uible-pounding speech bv Ren. Sol Bloom (D-N.V.) Bloom won over the vote of suvcral Latin American coun tries which previously had an nounced they were not ble to promise any further financial holp to UNRRA. Iran's new premier, Ahmed Oavam es Saflaneh. disclosed In Tehran that he had instruct ed All Solidly. Iranian UNO dolegata, to confer with Soviet Vice Foreign Commissar An drol Vtshiiuky In a new effort to settle the dispute by direct bilks. United Nations sources said they had high hones that the conference would "case the tension." Agent Plans . New Program TULELAKE Returning to Yreka after attending the annual conference lor farm advisors and home demonstration agents in Berkeley, Estclle Lair will launch a new nroRram of demon strations In all phases of home- making. Holding the title of war emcr gency food preservation assistant (luring me war. miss L.air now has a new appointment as home demonstration agent for Siskiyou county and states that she will bring to the county a peacetime program Including work In home furnishings, home management, as well as nutrition. A meeting of the homo dem onstration club will bo held Fri day, February 1, at the church annex at 2 p. m., Tulclakc. Miss Lair will glvo a demonstration on kitchen storage. The meeting, which will be open to the public, will be of In terest to all homemnkcrs and al so to persons planning to build in the near future. 'ft RHEUMATISM and ARTHRITIS I suffered for years and am so thankful Hint I found relief from this terrible affliction that 1 will gladly answer anyone writing me for information, Mrs. Anna Puutz, P. . O. Box 025, Vancouver, Wash. By JOAN O'NEILL The Honor society met yester day to compile a list of those persons having sufficient grade avoruges to be on tna minor rim or the- grand ff!mmmm honor roll. Stu dents must yri', 1 average to mwJ.i be on the r grand honor f?' roll. A 1 Is ' tho highest 'Af grade given fc&J.;.. at KUHS. Anf 4;2ikr JW average of 1.5 VM$&Z!&I Is required for . ,, . the honor roll. Jn O The following people arrived on the honor roll alter compute' tlon of semester grades: frosh men. Jeiinnetto Burrows. Bur- burn Perkins, Prlscllla Hutchlns, Helen Jackson, Margaret liar tell. Cameron Stewart. Richard Coggeshall, Jean Hall, Margaret Wedcl, John Young, Joe Tyler, Callya Elchendorf, Barbara Dnt son, Donna McFarlund, Janet Russell. Sophomores. Edith Wlisen bach, Bill Southwell, Mary Lou Case, Joyce ullbcrl, rloy Lunun, Howard Borough, Jerry Meek, Marian Mclntyro, Hob Mason, Audrey Lawronce, Bob Lauder dale. John Epley. James Griggs. Juniors, Milton Thompson, Caylord Upington, Joyce Sam ple, Jean Stroud, Ben Larson, Ruth Landry, Junot Llndbcry, Irma McBrlde. Norma Puckett, Marilyn O'Neill, Mary O'Brien, Shirley Dalton, Dorothy Collier, Helen Collins, Gloria Dalmer. Seniors, Nina Rose, Barbara Ruskump, Shirley Conrady, Ruth Hugolstein, Dorothea Whltcllne, uaryi vanderwan, triene vvneei er. Janice Bllyeu. Grand honor roll: freshmen, ttoDcrt Mooxcr, tioya tarsien son. Beverly Young. Sharon Wil Hams, Patricia Ward, Evalyn Rowland; Juniors, Joanne Ben net; seniors, Ruth Merrill, George Zupan, Mary Griffith. Tho freshman and Junior classes are tied on honor roll membership; tho freshman class out-numbers other classes on the grand honor roll. Physical edu cation grades are not tabulated. At the Half The girls physical ed depart ment put on a tumbling act at tho half-time Friday night. The girls did various tumbling acts. One of them was the forming of both Klamath and Grants Pass. The girls participating were Con. ml Vn.l.i.. n..PKar nuiiiin. Connie Hunt, Rosalie Falcs, Pat Smith, La Vonne Ernest, Mury Stone, Mary Jean Stuart, Dolores Moon, Belle Doris Russell, Jesse Totten, Joyce Dltmanscn, Gailya Elchendorf, Delia Robertson, uorouiy Hisgan and Jo webuer And Incidentally The Oregon state system of higher education Is offering a 10 weeks' typing course carrying two hours -of college credit to which high school seniors who have had high school typing arc eligible. The fee is $10 and classes will meet two evenings each week. The course may also be taken without credit, Interest ed seniors met today. The Business and Professional Women's club Is complimenting the senior girls Fcbruory 4 with a 7 o'clock dosscrt at the Wlllard hotel. This Is an annual affair. Lucile Tweed, vocational teacher,' attended a meeting of tho program committee for dis tributive education last week end in Portland and Salem. ' FIRES COSTLY VANCOUVER, Wash., Jan. 29 W) Fires In Vancouver housing authority's six projects cost nearly $100,000 lost year, the fire chief disclosed In his annual report today. That was double the 1044 fire damage of $40,233. NEW TREATMENT CHASES pirnvonr.is Million hire niffrnd In ilkne rlth the tnlMrfM of Pin-Worm but nA iufTr n lonwr! Today, thanks to a aptclal. mtdl calif rccoBnUed (Irujr, highly effective Irratmant has been mad poeelble. Thla drur la tho vlUl fnrrcdlent in IMV. the Pin-Worm UhltU developed In Uw Ubora tortca of Dr. D. Jayne Son. The l mal I. raayUMake P-W tablet act In ft aptclal way to remove IMn-Worma and . relieve that tormenting reetal Itch. Ho If you auapeet Pin-Worm In your ehlld or younidr. aak your ilmgtlit for a paokaar of JAYNI'S P-W right away, and follow tha direction. It'a aaiy to remember t P-W for Plo-Wormi FRIESEN-WELMAN CO. Plumbing and Heating 1715 Main St. Phone 7043 I. E. Frleien N. A. Welman a ' Under New Management! Stilwell's Shell Service So. 6th and Commercial ' Experienced, Courteous Service Specializing in Lubrication Guaranteed for 1000 Milei ' Or 30 Days. MINOR MOTOR REPAIRS Tires - Batteries - Accessories LET US TAKE CARE OF YOUR CAR Houn 7 A. M. to 6 P. M. OPERATED BY BROTHERS LOUIS and DARREL STILWELL Snowfalls Make State Roads Worse SALEM, Jan. 29 (!) High way conditions In Orogon wore worse today after heavy snow falls at higher elevations and In parts of eastern Oregon, the stute highway commission said. Travel on the state's two major routes was slowed by Ice on the Old Oregon Trail east of Pendleton, and by Ice on the Pacific highway in the Siskiyou mountains as well as at Medford and Orant Pass. The daily road report: Government Camp Snow ing, B Inches new snow, 78 Inches total snow, temperature 22 degrees. Santiam Junction Snowing lightly, 28 degrees. 12 Inches new snow, total snow at sum mit 110 Inches, at Junction 70 inches. Odell lake Snowing hard, 17 degrees, 11 Inches new snow, total snow 129 inches. Chains required. One-way traffic be tween Oakridge and summit. Siskiyou summit Icy con dition In Blsklyous south of Ashland also at Medford and Grants Pass. New Snow Klamath Falls Four inches new snow on Hayden mountain on Green Springs highway, still snowing. Three Inches new snow on Quartz mountain on Lukevlew highway, still snow ing, two inches new snow on Sun mountain on The Dalles Callfornla highway, still snow ing, total snow 102 inches. Roseburg Snow and rain. Astoria Rain and sleet. Light snow in mountain areas. Short detour on Columbia high way at east city limits of As toria. One-way traffic on Coast highway at Manranlta. Coqullle Light snow at higher elevations, being sanded. The Dalles Roads normal. Pendleton Overcast, pave ment dry. Meacham Snowing hard, 10 Inches new snow, total 38 Inches. Some packed snow on Oregon Trail between La Grande and Pendleton. La Grande 8nowInf. Half Inch of new snow, packed snow on Old Oregon Trail. Baker Fog, with spots of Ice on Old Oregon Trail. Bend Snowing lightly. Snowing at Laplne, two inches new snow, ice on road, being sanded. Watch For the mi id ROOSTER ..... e ' The World Today By DeWITT MacKENZIE AP World Traveler MADRID, Jan. 20 Freedom of the press naturally Is an Ideal which never ceases to flame within the newspaperman, and your correspondent would have Ki.nn Inrlnnri a V "k.. ' 5'."l poor represen tative of his kind If he hadn't raised this question in his Inter, view with G e norallsslmo Franco. The subject is especially close to me be- .Bin. Hurlna the generation MacKENZIE of my foreign service I've worked under censorships some of them terribly harsh In many countries of both hemi spheres. More to the point, world peace depends on real ac quaintance among the peoples of all nations. This acquaintance calls for the free exchange of news not only reports of great event but the story of every day life, I asked the generalis simo if he shared this point of view. Free News Exchange "Only in part," he replied, "for although a better acquaint ance among peoples will con tribute without doubt to peace among the nations, the free ex change of news will only favor it if the news Is true and Is the result of a faithful and objective Judgment, If, on the contrary, the news sins by falsity and calumny, then Its effects would be totally adverse and would contribute to encourage differ ences among nations. "This Is a problem of morality and education, as it is among in dividuals. Good morality and painstaking education make liv ing together easy, but when these do not exist or are forgot ten, living together is impos sible. If It Is reolly desired to take the road toward peace, it is necessary to return to the forms of good morality and courtesy damaged by the war." Ideas Cultivated Franco said the government Is seeking to cultivate these ideas through the Spanish press and he continued: "The Spanish government at the end of the war decreed free dom of Information for foreign correspondents. Spain desires not to conceal its truth from the world, and during the last 10 years It has been devoting Its at tention to preventing the Irrita tion of Its relations with other countries by excesses of its press or its radio, and has required from Its organs of opinion a mod eration which does not deprive them of the noble defense of that which affects us or of the serene and dispassionate criticism of great International events. LUCKY BREAKDOWN KANSAS CITY, Kas., Jan. 29 lP) Marine Cpl. Charles R. Walters of Ellslnore. Mo., bound for Great Lakes, III., for dis charge, made the most of his troop train's delay here. He got his commanding offi cer's permission to visit his fian cee, Miss Ada Marie Golden. Then they got married. Plateholders To Be Vacant SALEM, Jan. 29 (IP) Secre tary of State Robert S. Farrell Jr., advised motor vehicle own ers today that they must not put anything on the front of their cars where their license plate used to be. This Is the first year that cars and trucks have had a single ?late, leaving the plateholders at he front end of the vehicles va cant. Farrell said he Issued the warn ing because some commercial firms have been getting ideas about putting advertising plac ards on the front ends of cars and trucks. SERVING FOR LINCOLN SPRINGFIELD, 111., Jan. 29 IJP) A postcard addressed to Abraham Lincoln, Springfield, III., was received by Manager Tuesday. Jen. 21, ! HERALD AND NEWS THREB Hayden Davis of the Abraham Lincoln hotel. It read: "Dear Mr. Lincoln: Please send me a copy of your famous Gettysburg address. I need It for BOYS' JACKETS Suits. Ensembles, Shirts, Sport Shirts SUGARMAN'S l 4 M.la DEVELOPING ENLARGING PRINTING PHOTO SERVICE 211 Underwood Bid NOTICE! -AEROSOL- For direct application of fine penicillin mist to infections of nose, throot and lungs. (Asthma, Bronchitis, Colds, Sinusitis, Hay Fever, Etc.) McATEE CLINIC school. Robert Bcndler, 211 York St., Camden, N. J,", Davis sent a copy of the speech, in the next mall. r NO FLAW In Your Title! Practically every piece of real property ii not merely second hand lc has passed through mtny hands, frequently with ; Joint ownership and other complications. It is easy for flaws to grow In a hundred years! Protect yourself with Commonwealth Insured Title aad know there Is ao flaw lis your title that can cause yoa loss. WUm TWe ami AMrect Ce. Paul O. Landry this question: "Is It true that the new automobile liability policy provides for payment of medical expense for in jured persons, including the Insured, coverage for substitute car while the insured vehicle Is laid up for repairs, arranges bail bond, protects the Insured against liability even while carrying passengers for charge and has many other new end valuable features?" For 'Information' on any Insurance problem, consult THE LANDRY CO. 419 Main St. Ph. 56! 2 Serving Klamath 20 Yean The Courthouse Is Now One Block Down The Street From Our Office. . The Place To Eat . , Where You Get ThiB Best Southern Fried Chicken With Hot liscuit. and Homemade Pie LEAH'S DRIVE-INN , Weyerhaeuser Junction. Ashland Highway I rSI Look a ' IVw size smaller itlrf jjptjL You can btill be 111? i m 1 weight Charmqde girdle of fes flexible rayon satin and -if li elastic. Sizes 28 to 31. W tf i 'V The bra beautifully iF I f I controls medium busts 13S Be. Ith 5EARS Phone He ll 122 So. 7th Phone 5535 mmmmmgJi ffiV ,,. mi WSji'JU -am ii m'"mm . i (teg (M S I ' ? M! DaU and business typl l- M Prints! PrnsMsI Plains! Y'llll V I I V V' lPj 2-Color Contrasts! Stripes! jfjl J MjF I Fin quality rayons; sheers! A m A 133 So. 8th Phone Silt I