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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1946)
Today's Newsie WEATHER Mia. Mm Prsrlp tugans 10 l ." tlamalh r.iu . H W Ul U. I.MKMlV .. . "I " ..Miami 14 M , .W lam M '" Ian Fraiwtaco lis 47 -0u ball) ......... w M Traca ataaMatal " lad UlUll lul M .W ONEUUN- aYattarad aloud. ! and ivairaal WHl urlhni Inday, loitlghl and rnaaitay aaraul claar tiaar Kuiu Hlvar May. Collar aaal aitd canlrar pmUoiia. UiMlatata mirlliwaal wlnil. olf liaal, NUMTIirilN L'Al.trollNIA- I'laar to Jay and Tuaadav bul Willi rnaalal log. Ulghtly eoolar Ialta raglwt UMlay. Uanlla la inodarala nurlliwaalarlr wlnua off Lady Elgin Tim Lady Bailie dub will meet Wednesday at noon at the hum ul Clura Winer nf 2;Hft (Jrchurd tor noon put- luek luncheon. i'lnuchle will bn played. All are curdlally Invited. Meeting Kluinulh cnuptcr 14. of the International Kuut- Lriutcrs aggoclutlon will luve uglnegs and dlrnctnra meeting t the I'ellcun ca(c, Wednesday. The merltim la to iiliirt at 7 :10 p. in. Duos will he collected jnd refreshment and entertain mrnt will highlight the met linn. To Crescent City Clarence Flocchlnl of 104.1 Mi'lhnw. ac companied by (Jluityi Hulling bcrg and Mary Kocrncr, motored to Crescent City lent Sulurduy. The group returned Sunday eve nine accompanied by Cecelia and Lorraine Flocchlnl, who have been vacationing there. Improving Lcwla Heavllln of Kedtnund. Ore., U Improving In Ihe hospital from a cur accident lust buturduy, In which ho gut tered a broken hip and Internal In lurica. Lewis in a former Kliiiiiulh Kulla realdunl und Is well-known here. Moving Mm. Hertlc Mcllnf fey of .'ill Division, pinna to mnkc her home In Jacksonville, Ore., In the neur future. 8he has wild her present homo to Walt Kulsbcry, city building In-Iector. Returned A. J. llubburd linn returned from a two-week gtuy at the Hoy Scout camp at Crescent hike, where he has been acting ai scoutmaster. Hubbard returned home luat night. VUltt Mri. Robert D. Shaw and duiighter, Stephnnie of I'urtlunri are vlstlug Mrg. Fran Cla H. Oldg, 44(1 S. Itlvcrslde. for two werk. Mrg. Shuw ! the dauiihler of Mrg. Old. ! 1 I C ' W , r i Alturas Ready For Big Rodeo The gecond annual Alturag rodeo will be held In that city on Saturday and Sunday, Au gust 17 and 18. The ahow, gpongored by the Alturug rodi-o association, will feature a full program and promises to be a fast-moving affair. Stock for the two-day show will be furnished by Muck Har bour, Klamath rodeo gtockmun, whp will take his string of bucking horses and Brahma bulls along with some of the , coast's top riders. I Good purses are offered in , calf roping, bronc riding, wild cow milking, bulldogglng and i lirahma bull riding. Special ! attractions for the show will Include Murgc and Allen Ens ley, trick riding und roping; Felix Cooper, colored bull fighter from Klamath Falls; Jimmy Dixon and his mule; Chuck Mowdy and his trained liruhma bull, plus local talent. Muck Harbour will act as arena director. Tickets for the show are on sale at the Nilcs hotel in Al turas. The Fireball Is the first single engine airplune which hag a full leathering propeller, ling lea tore permit the pilot to select Jet or propeller power or a com binutlon ol bom. CI n. D .AmA I "aI.D NtWS. KlaaailH Fall.. Ora. aMWIS hfivp nsjfcviuvw In Portland Cargoes PORTLAND, Aug. 12 (IP) Portland and lower Columbia river ports shipped $89,837,601 worth of cargo during the last seven months. Just 17 per cent of the value of shipments during the same period In 1B45. Tonnage was 919.838 short tons, much of it lumber, paper, coal, and grain. Shipments went MON DAY, Aaf. II. IMS, rag ! to 21 nations, with Russia the principal customer. She received $34,S91.272 worth of goods, about 10 per cent the value of goods she took in the seven months of the preceding wartime year. Insects sometimes are carried 800 miles by wind. y . ..t-e- in iEAVOPlTSQ. , II mjr l ea MiLiiODS oa i itj V I 0 i n i ia Back To Chicago PFC Bur ton Sundlierg, of Isanti, Miss., left for Clilcugo whero he Is slu tinned toduy. Ho has been vis iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nets Humibcrg here for the pant week. Property Sold Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cole of Sprague River, sold their property recently and left fur Grunts Pass yesterday, whore they plan to make their home. Resort To Run Plane Service The first established plane service to be operated by a va cation reaorl in northern Call fornla will gel under way next week when a five-place Navlnn airplane is delivered to the Trinity Alps resort near Wea-vervllle. The plane will work from the Weavervllle airfield and cities of the rest of the state Service from Ssn Francisco to the resort is promised In an hour and a half. Piloting the plane wilt be George E. Speake, ' 'rk-navy pilot. The new ship will, also be used to fly resort guests over the rugged Trinity alps terrain and primitive area, formerly accessible only by pack trip. The plane will alo run tourist trips to the Shasta lake area. Leave Jerry and Shirley llei-khnm, children of Mr. and Mrs. James lieckhnm of 202H Siskiyou, left Sunday for a month's vacation in Initio, Culif. Vacation C. G. Woodhouse if the Klamath Union high school fuculty, is leaving for a short vacation next week, lie will travel along the coast. Back Jean Thompson, high school office secretary, will re turn to work tomorrow, blie has hern vacationing for the pust two weeks In California, EDDIE McAULIFFE Young Eddie Mc-Auliffe has hud a monopoly on the paper currying biuincns In Mulln for six years. Tills businessman began carrying The Herald and News in his town when he was only five years old, which makes him 11 now. lie s another young Irishman, although you'd never know it from thut wide, easy grin, bight blue eyes and freckled fucc, who wants to go to Ireland on the money he's making. He has a horse, named "liollie," and a cocker spaniel, "Lassie." This summer he's been pretty busy keeping up on his model airplane collection, his horse, his dog, and driving a tractor fur his dad. About thut plane collection . . . he makes the models and hangs them In his room, but duesn t know what he's going to do when the collection outgrows the room. Eddie will be in the sixth grade at Mulln grade school this fail. WASHING MACHINE SERVICE All Mokaa Phone 880S TUCKER STEINKAMP APPLIANCES Esquire Bldg. Hunters and Vacationists! Compare These Prices for 12.29-Ounce TENTS and TARPS! Wall Tenrs 8 x 10 ... 27.95 10 x 12 . .33.95 12 x 14 . ..39.95 TARPS 10 x 12 14.00 up to 16 x 24 ..48.30 7x9 7.50 8 x 10 10.50 HOWIE BROS. JS8 V.-J. DAY WED., AUG. 14 BALDY'S BAND F.oruring Vocalists Mary Mahoney Van Thome Patty Mayer Dancing 9 Til 1 74c Per Person, Inc. Tax Ladles Aid The Mt. Laki Ludleg aid will meet Wednes day afternoon at the home of Mrg. Sum Emniin at 2 p, m. In Hospital Mrs. Charles Pra ley of 2U1U Front, is in Hillside hospital where ghe g recovering from a major operation. Flrg The city fire depart ment wag called at 4:49 p. m Minday in extinguish a grass lire at 822 Birch. Illness James Blair of 1527 Oregon left Sunday for Ulysses, Nebr., whc.ro he was called by the serious Illness of his brother. Picnic The Three R club will hold a picnic at Moore park Tuesday at 12:30 p. m. American Fishermen To Instruct Chinese SEATTLE. Aug. 12 (41 Ar rival of a convoy of six deep sea fisliing vessels from Scuttle was reported yesterday in a UNRRA dispatch to the rust-Inlclligen-cur from Shanghai, China. The vessels compose one of tiirce convoys which left Seattle recently manned with experi enced American fishing crews who will remain in China to In struct the Chinese in modern power boat fishing operations. Maple syrup is taken from the trees in spring. Klamath Falls Marine On Duty In Hawaii EWA, Oahu, T. II., Aug. 12 Marine Private William J. Put mnn, 18, son of Mr. Charles Putman. 2450 Durrow, Klamath Falls, Ore., recently arrived in Hawaii for duty with murine transport squadron 053. Putman, who attended Klam ath Union high school, enlisted in December 1045. Prior to enter . Inn the marine corps ha worked for tha Southern Pacific railroad. Important! "HOME GARDENERS .pOR ifty-wah skin utll x sfir gardtning with a luiiiy soap ihsi cltsmai affaciivalr and sg rtssbly. Use Reilnol Soap. To chafti, ivy poiion, lunburn ...apply toothing Raiinol Oinl mam. Fal ii tsis iichy burning. OINTMENT All SOAP RESIN0L" Insurance Needs are not uniform There Is a SUN LIFE Policy to fit every need. PAUL A. LEE Phone 7777 111 N. Ith SUN LIFE OF CANADA Tile gloves of all baseball players, except the catcher, carry restrictions as to size and weight. rn If "7 UU4.77imLl0Wn "Just" A Housewife By EARL WHITLOCK So often, on the air, some, woman will be asked by a Mas ter of Ceremonies, what ghe does. And she will reply, meek ly, "Oh, I'm Just housewife." JUST a housewife, lndeedl Just an ex perienced buy er of family mere handine of every sort. Just a cook and house kecper for a husband and family who depend on her for every comfort of liv ing. Just a nurse In time of Illness. Just a wise counsellor and companion when a mon Is down on his luck. Just a dietician who keeps up with tho latest scien tific knowledge of food values. Just a teacher of tho most Im portant coclo of action which children will ever loam the knowledge of right and wrong. Just a haven for hurt childish hearts and a booster pump for a husband's self esteem. "Just" a houscwifel "Just" the influence which holds to gMher the homes of America and through them the nallon. "IT IS COOL IN MEMORY . GARDEN" Earl Whitlock Next" Mondiiy Mr. Whitlock nf the Kiirl Whitlock Funeral home will comment on "They Won't nellre." 'laair a NEW li PX Be there on timel KEY WIND ALARM CLOCK 1 55' Ba Plus 10 Tax It's important to be on time and this clock's gen tle but forceful alarm should help you accom plish that. Wind the spring and It will run for 40 hours! The ivory fin ish makes it welcome in most any room! EVENFLO NURSERY BOTTLE 25 Nipple, bottle and cap. "All In one" Sanitary seals food. Inverted nip ple for refrigerator or travel. Nipple and wide mouth bottle easy to clean. SWONK floor BOYS' SLACK SOCKS 25' Pr. Slack length, ribbed socks in monotone or several colors. IIOWNSTAISS CassasaZZZ!saaZaaagZZl.J 2313 S" 8I" Phone 33 , TTTTTTTT I I ' 0.rrVtS TUC U EUf UlTMB A r I W (TtJ, if I f ink nan nniwnnii ! SUITLOOK ' ! .ykwKly ZJl FOR FALL. . 1 W S ZLat K S Iliac mvj - A I I J AY the cardigan Beeklines laU ' && frpi' J I into place with easy elegance. 0 A7 bOCA K VOlf la superb wools. 10-20, 9-1S. 4.. iJ A -ft.y- vfr-f f s v-- , I V " ''jwk I 7 (I COATS WITH A "DIFFERENT w T J ,Slffli ' L00K" V V lTl fi-? .r I'ivKl ( t II Two of the striking styles you'll find In Penney's ' 7ajV O J 1 aw J VaVV-lAf I III I I varied winter coat collection. Beaver-dyed mou- x -Vt V '" jf I I Wllif ' I Ii ton-processed lamb, lavishly used in imaginative r ya)-aii' r ifTi J 3 Si w I new treatments ... on a wonderfully warm wool ANSC W -Hi-f.W aTlV V 4 If fleece fabric, backed with cotton for extra strength. AK5 ' itaaX C -fJJiV I N! J I Re1 winter weight, with interlining!. Sizes 10. kA '.V?Pl iff I I (I to 18. i V V 24.75-29.75 f Sf SECOND FLOOR SECOND FLOOR j'i '. ' ...,ed Gove y nA bcntt"1 downstairs ij,V" MAW rLOom