Police Case
Subject Of
Council Talk
Regrets wore expressed by at
least two city councllmen, Paul
O. Landry end one of the new
members, A. F? Condrey, on
lack of action on the part of
the council during the recent
Investigation of alleged police
brutality by the Klamath coun
ty grand jury as the city fath
ers gathered around the city
hall table last night, first meet
ing of the new year.
Condrey expressed the opin
ion that a story carried by The
Herald and News on December
2, gave the impression, that sev
eral members, if not all, of the
city police department, were to
be Indicted by the grand Jury.
Landry backed Condrey in his
statement and said that "some
clarification" should be made
as the police department and
city officials were placed "in a
bad light." It was suggested by
both that the council take ac
tion similar to that taken re
cently by the Malin city coun
cil when the Malin police de
partment was under fire but
the fathers let the matter go
last night without a resolution.
Three new members were
sworn in by the mayor, W. D.
Miller, representing ward 2. A.
F. Condrey of ward 3, and Wen
dell Smith, ward 5.
Parking meters were dis
cussed at length and City En
gineer E. A. Thomas suggested
that installation of the dockers
be withheld until the ordinance
was passed. The ordinance was
introduced and passed the first
and second readings. It pro-
vides for installation, upkeep
and use of the revenue from the
meters during the six months'
trial period. Thomas said the
meters had arrived from the
factory but that the coin boxes
are not here, delaying installa
tion. The engineer advised that a
atop sign has been placed at
the right-turn corners at 6th
and E. Main. Motorists have
been able to make a right-turn
off S. 6th at any time at this
point but will now stop.
Two ordinances passed the
final reading, one providing for
the assessment roles for im
proving unit 92 on Doty, the
second calling for combining
the park board and recreation
committee and revising selec
tion and terms of office for the
two agencies.
T. J. Hathaway, 1920 Wor
den, reported on coasting con
ditions on Worden and the mat
ter was referred to the street
committee.
The end of the year brought
in a large number of license
applications, all approved by
the council. Licenses for music
machines totalled 63; pinball
games, 47; liquor dealers, 5;
bowling alleys, 2; billiard par
lors, 2; card rooms, 2; plumb
ers, 3; auto wreckers, 1; second
hand dealers, 4; dance halls, 4;
taxicabs. 1; beauty and barber
shops, 18; restaurants 14; meat
and dairy dealers, 19; apart
ment houses and hotels, 20,
Weather Clear
At Crater Lake
Clear and bright was the
Tuesday morning radio report
from Crater Lake national
park, and unless there is a snow
fall before the end of the week,
skiing will not be too good, park
officials said today.
Roads into the park area are
clear of ice and snow and chains
were not required Tuesday.
Fifty-seven inches of snow cov
ered with a breakable crust, does
not make for good skiing but a
light fall will take care of this
condition, it was reported. Mini
mum temperature the past 24
hours is 20 degrees, maximum,
46. At 8:30 a. m. it was 43 and
warmer temperatures are in
prospect
Chinese Welcome '
Dairen Request
. NANKING, Jan. 7 OF) Chi
nese foreign office sources today
welcomed the United States' dip
lomatic note urging China and
Russia to open the Manchurian
port of Dairen to world trade
free of Russian military control.
and under Chinese administra-1
tion. I
They termed the "welcome"
American note "an added means
of returning the gateway of Man
churia to Chinese control."
HOP
HASHES?
Women in your '40V-this great medi
cine is famous to relieve hot flashes,
nervous tension when due to the
functional 'middle-age' period pecu
liar to women. Worth trying t
irBiA!.pimmvx
Prompt, Long-lasting Relief for
MUSCULAR
ACHES-PAINS
ACI1
Help
Surf
KUBON
Htlot Break Uo Painful
Surface Conflation, Tool
PLASTIC ARTIFICIAL EYES
PLASTIC CONTACT LENSES
Harry T. Smith of Portland
Will Be In
Medford, Ore., 204 Medford Building
JANUARY 9, 1947
Boyle's Column
Sculptured Models Of -Airplanes
Speed Up Plant
By HAL BOYLE
BRIDGEPORT. Conn., Jan. 7
Art has been put into har
ness in many modern factories.
Paul Rudin, a 43.year-old
Swiss of many talents, is an ex
ample of how the creative eye
and imagination of the sculptor
can provide time-saving short
cuts for industry.
Paul is an intense and sensi
tive artist and writer who want
ed to be an engineer in his
youth but gave it up because he
was a pacifist.
"I felt that engineering in
Europe only led to war," he
said, "and I thought that through
art and literature I could do
more for peace."
He came to New York in 1920
after study in Paris where fel
low artists accused him of "shoot
ing at the moon" because he
worked for the development of
a United States of Europe.
In the big money days of that
boom period Paul had more
commissions than he could exe
cute in his Greenwich village.
studio. But art feu on evil days
when the depression came and
Rudin moved to an old mill at
Otnwers, N. Y to save rent.
When war broke out he joined
other artists and professional
men who sought factory employ
ment. His supervisors at the
Chance Vought division of Unit
ed Aircraft here were at first
i , . . t: a . . l n .
nam put iu imu an uuuci xtt i
his special skill. A sculptoOT
seemed about as valuable to
them in building airplanes as a
veterinarian.
Found Own Place
Paul found his own place. He
noticed that it took months to
make and experiment with
wooden models for the new
shapes of airplane engines and
Three Youths
Held In Theft
Roy Lloyd Laird. 18. 4410
Cottage, and three juvenile boys,
all aged 16, have been taken in
to custody by city police and the
juvenile office in connection
with the men ot several rolls
of copper wire frim the tele
phone company.
Laird and two of the younger
boys are still in custody, the
other, who Faye Blackmer, dep
uty juvenile officer, said had no
previous record, was paroled to
his parents.
The boys are supposed to have
taken the rolls of wire from a
telephone company stockpile at
Main and Payne on two differ
ent occasions, December 17 and
28, and police said it was sold to
Sessler Brothers company with
out Sessler's knowledge.
County School
Board To Meet
The county school board will
hold its regular January meeting
tomorrow afternoon in the
school office. Veterans Memor
ial building, with a discussion
of the basic school support bill
recently approved by the voters
as the principal topic of discus
sion. The school support bill pro
vides that up to $50 per school
child will be distributed by the
state to the counties.
Ora F. Blay is chairman of j
the school board, and E. W. Gow-!
en is vice chairman. Other mem-1
bers are D. E. Colwell, Percy i
Dixon and Harry E. Wilson. I
Harold Ashley is superintendent
of county schools.
City Delivery Service. Phone
8417.
CHIROPODIST . FOOT SPECIALIST
Or. Kenneth S. Garvin
Faat Sarsery - and - Orthopedics
McATEE CLINIC
IK S. Ilk St. Phan 1171
1 RgMjcUo.
Dine & Dance
Bar Open
10 a.m. Daily
On Highway 39
Calif. -Ore. State
Line
mounting parts being involved
by engineers. Sometimes scores
of shapes had to be tried before
the one most eiticieni was
found.
I asked to try to reduce the
time by making plaster models,"
he said. And somewhat dubious
supervisors gave him the chance.
Plans engineers found almost
at once that Paul was the answer
to their prayers. With the
sculptor's instinctive sense of
form he-was able in a few hours
to model the designs they for
mulated, designs so intricate'
they could not even be shown in
line drawings.
Rudin eventually found a way
to make his plaster models so
strong that engineers could test
them and improve the designs
without bothering even to make
metal castings another time
saver. Every engine part is a com
promise in an effort to condense
a maximum amount of per
formance into a minimum of
space. Engineers say Paul's abil
ity to visualize new shapes has
helped improve their designs,
but he himself merely said:
"I am merely one more
method by which the engineers
can proceed deeper into specula,
tion. Through this work I have
learned a new understanding of
the grammer of form."
Delicate Work
He has modeled one air duct
with curves so delicate that
workers at the plant feel it
should be put on display as a
masterpiece of modern art.
"I could call it 'lady in flight,'"
he smiled.
In his spare time Rudin experi
ments with flowers, builds
furniture, does portraits in stone,
makes etchings, wood engrav
ings and water colors and trans
slates such American legends
as "Johnny Appleseed" into
Schweitzer Dutch, a Swiss va
riant of the German language.
Every so often he wearies of
fashioning abstract engineering
forms and sculps an eagle or
other conventional figure to
stick up around the plant.
I asked him if making plaster
models of other men's designs
satisfied him and he grinned and
said:
There are some things in a
sculptor's soul we shouldn't go
into."
But he has proved sculptors
have a place in industry. The
factory here has hired three
more.
Call
l-l
eien
Owner and Operator of
Helen's Beauty Shop
8200
for your beauty workl
4056 Shasta Way Ph. 8200
I I I II I HC1UUT SB TfS(
I I II I
ULS-STORE WIDE SALE
SPORT COATS I MACKINAWS,
.now 27.50 PfACOATS
JLhow 17.50 . 9.85
J now1' 12.95
"Big Duke" i
LEATHER JaCED I Men's CRUISERS
GLOYES All Wool . . . Plaids
S:w.98.c: 83c
(Limit 2 pairs to Reg. 1S.50. 11 QC
customer) Now Ma3
EESaEEaBBEBflBIBSI alaBMMeVaEHBBBII
QUALITY TOPCOATS
Values to $60 NOW 43.50
Value to $50 A. .. - NOW 39.50 I
Values to $40 NOW 28.50 I
Men's MACKINAWS
Finger-Tip Models
Regularly 10 0C
19.50 Now 14.73
ALL WOOL JACKETS
Values to 0 0C
12.85 Now .03
Values to L QC
8.85 ,Now 0.73
DREW'S MANSTORE
733 Main Phone 3463
Merrill Man
Fined In Court
R. It. Raymond of Merrill,
charged Willi drawing a bank
check with insufficient funds to
cover, was fined $22.20 in Jus
tice court this morning.
Raymond is supposed to have
given a check for $131.60 on a
Tulelake bank to Jim Kaler for
repair work at Kaler's garage
last June, and the bank refused
the check. Since that timo part
of the debt had been paid.
Justice J. A, Mahpncy said
that the number of such cases
here was Increasing and thiit it
was the policy of his court to
give persons as much timo as
possible to make good bunk
overdrafts and the like before
going to court with the misde
meanor charge,
$25 Fine Levied
On Gambling Charge
Floyd Burlovv, Pelicun Clly,
who was indicted for operating a
gambling game, yesterday plead
ed guilty in circuit court and
paid a fine of $25. He had been
free on $250 bail held over from
the original gambling charge
placed against him in justice
court.
Burlow's indictment is the
first of those returned by Uic
last grand jury to be settled.
George Long Named
New Police Judge
TULELAKE. Jan. 7 The city
council officially confirmed ap
pointment of George Long of
Tulelake as new police judge, re
placing W. A. Clendenen, who
recently moved to Lebanon. Ore.
Long was also appointed jus
tice of the peace of Tulelake
township, and expects confirma
tion of the appointment from
Yreka by the end of the week.
R. F. McLaren was appointed
city attorney, succeeding Mrs.
Georgia Wilson.
Dr. M. C. Cassel
Chiropractic Physician
Headaches. Gas, Stomach
and Spinal Ailments
TELcruoMB
127 So, 7th St.
Attention!
All Former Officers
of the Armed Forces
All former officers of
ony branch of the
service are invited to
attend an interesting
meeting of the Reserve
Officers Association at
the
PELICAN CAFE
PARTY ROOM
7 P. M.
CASTLE HATS
Value to
8.50 Now
5.50
Boys'
FINGER-TIP COATS
n.w ls-50l. , 11.95
I II T..-.J.. C
STORE HOURS
9 A. M 5:30 P. M.
POPULAR CUSHION DOT
PRISCILIAS he 5.27
Fine quality marquisette.
Each side 42"x81". Ivory,
Milk weed pattern.
MEN'S ALL WOOL TOPCOATS
For warmth plus style! Single breasted OC
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BRENT HATS FOR MEN
They retain their shapes! Choose yours in genu
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HOUSE APRONS . . STYLES GALORE!
Prints and solid colors . . . clever details . . . JQ
colorful and perky. Buy several at this price. Ea.
LASTEX KNIT RAYON PANTIES
Smooth-fitting, All sizes In
white. Lace trimmed and
REG. 37.50 SHEEPLINED COATS
Men save on these smart
surcoat models with lambskin collars.
Sizes 38-48
LADIES' SATIN LASTEX GIRDLES
Nylon faggoted scams in tcarosc. 4-clastie
garters. Sizes small, medium, large
QUALITY PLATFORM ROCKERS
A comfortable piece ot furniture ... and a handsome
one! Priced low for immediate
clearance! ,
PLASTIC & STEEL
Ideal for all "soft" shop work.
Reg. 2.25 -I Reg. 1.99 J mm
Now..
I . I Now....
Drastically Reduced! BLOCK PLANES
Here is a handy tool and sharply reduced for Qf
clearance
COCOA FIBER DOOR MATS
Buy for each entrance! Strong cross weave, thick 0 "j Q
brush-like surface, keeps floors clean. 18"x27" I
MASTER QUALITY
8 drills in handle . . . sizes for any use. Very
sturdy drill. "Priced economically
Master Quality. 1 1 -
10 sockets . . . sizes from
handles and metal box
REDUCED! POLISHING HEADS
a
Bronze bearings ... M" arbors. The tool of
many uses. Buy nowl
MECHANICS' TROUBLE LIGHTS
Rubber grip-steel guard.
bulbs. 25' rubber cord
BROKE? USE CREDIT!
Do you have that after-Christmas
lack of cash? Then use Wards
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now and save. Pay later on con
venient terms from income!
9th and Pint
WARDS
mmm
i r.. Jin ri
SOFT, HUFFY IATH
MAT SITS 2.99
New floral design In white
and pastels. Soft yarns tuft
ed throutih heavy duck.
Mat size, 21x32 in.
5.00
ten rose and
.lr77C
tailored P
coats of fine leather. Belted
29.95
2.97
36.00
HEAD MALLETS
Reg. 98c
Now
37c
Gfc
HAND DRILLS
4.44
Pc. SOCKET SETS
ETS
6.44
718" to 1". Flex
, ..
1.77
Takes up to 100-watt
2.44
KIAI.D NKWS, HlaaHlk Ora.
BUNNY MITTS IN
GIRLS' SIZES
79c
Loulllul whil. bunny fir bocln
with bright-colored wool polmil
A real bargain . i .Ward priced!
r
COLORFUL
HOUSECOATS
i
Cay prinlx on quality rayon fubrics
Crepes and poplins wide choice of colors
excellent style and detail.
i
All-Wool Jacquard
SWEATERS
Sturdy Norwegian-type slipon ... in
cheery colors, gay outdoor patterns. Sizes
34-40.
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MASTER QUALITY
AXES 1
Single bit axe
Our' top quality ..
Double bit axes hickory handle,
31,4 In hnnrt Our hnat
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LAKESIDE VISE
Ideal tool for home, shop
jaws, specially priced
r i
M
TlltltUAV, Jan. 1, 1X1, faa Klflil
WINTER WOOLENS
PRICED TO CLEAR
1.57 yd.
Regularly 2.1)8 yd. Suit,
lug", coatings and (Inns
weight in all wool tub.
rirs.
i
500
388
,
v.
237 f
if--r
217
and garage. 3 V
to clear
729
.M'.......iT....:l:tM.UtX';...l
Phone 3188