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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1947)
WEATHER NOHTIIIim L'AI-lroMNIA Portly rlotiily in hIioiiio tiorlh. relr leowhoio nropl for light intiriiliif foge, Ini'reiie- Jns cliilHllltoee loiloy mill liiliinrrow. ,1(11 rlionao lit leiiiiiNinliir, tlnntlu vorlnlitei wliitle tiff riiABl rixrept Imm'oiii' In murinmls ooutliorly wlmU ailing ex treme nuillitrn uuaot lunlMlit, WAHI1INUT0N ANIJ OHMION- Oc. raoHtnol llilil rolu woet tiiiMliiii tiitlay nil tunlllH, wltli a fw eniiw Mtirrloo tn aael Murium. Unlit wool tioitltili mid iniiw aeol iHirtliut lunmi-niw. l.mle rhattse) lit loinporotura, rraeli to olrun oulliorly wlmla off riMlol. Methodist Women Tim rcgu I it i' muiillily goiifiul mooting of Did Woman' Buddy of Chris tluii Kurvlca of thti r'lrel Motlio dint church will bit Iti'ltl In Hie church parlor Thursday, Junu my At 1U;30 tho study cluna will ussumblo ii i Hi Mm. J. C. Yuilun, tho leader, will liikn as Jwr subject, 'CltiliitlMit Multvo mid Method of blt?wiii(lliip." There will bo mick lunch lit noon, mooting of tbo executive boiird at 1 p. nt., and tho pruycr circle will meet tit 1:40, with the biul new meeting and program at 2 p. m. Mra. 11. A, tlitgman, proiiram chairman for the duy, will present the eubject "Stew unUliln of Cltlldhoiid of the World," and all women of tho church and Hi friend tiro Invit ed to attend, especially tho moth. era of young children. There will be a nursery where chll rtrin imiv be cniud for. mid fol lowing the mooting lhilh circle will icrve tea. Wodnasday Club There will be a regular meeting of tho Wed .iiiv dub at tho Din-lull houe of St. l'aul' Eplacopal church WcdncaUay at e p.m. "it n--' bora ero urged to attend. Hunt will bo Mra. Hoy Whytul chairntaii of nrriitigciiicnla, Mra. Prank llogutny, mra. joint ociiu lTt. Mitrtha liorg and Mra. Jitntca A. Kcull. To Modford Mr. and Mra Vic Dotiglua, Mra. Kd McCrack' ... ....! KIcm I.MMti' Yurnell tnn tored to Mrdford lut Thursday to vlalt Yarncll, wlio l employed there, ino larneii nuvc juu chased a new homo near Med r..rH Hurt Mik Yurnell and theli daughter, Helen, will move there thla weekend. Bona Vlalt -Vlaltlng their par cut. Mr. and Mra. Hay Hun taker of 2D7& Summon lane, re cently, were their aona, Don and Dale, and t'loyd and hia wifo, who were In Klamath Falla for the wedding ot Jean Drew and Jesse Angel. Daughter Born Mr. and Mra ' Harold 11. Uglum. 2002 Worden, are parenla of a daughter, 7 pounds 3 ounce, born Montlny at Maninin vaney nonpitai. nc cording to hoapltal altendnnta Mra. Uglum la an English war bride. Regular Meeting - Calvury eommandcry 18, KnlghU Temp lar, will hold a regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. There will be work In the Order of Red Cross and Order of Malta. All Sir Knighta are invited. ' SlIngerettM A club potluck luncheon will be held at noon Thuradny at KC hall followed by a card party at 2 p. m. Mra. Ed Brown and Mra. Carl Henry win be hostoaacw and all mcmbera and proapectivo members of the Stlngerettca club are Invited to attend, Treatment Floyd L, John' son, SI, 315 Lincoln, wait admit ted to Klumath Valley hoapltnl Monday for treatment of an old ahoulder Injury, johnaon la em. ployed by Link Service station, To San Francisco II. A Myers and John Happen left Monday or San FrancMco where the latter will receive medical attention. To California Mr. and Mra, Jesse Drew of Dairy left Inst week for southern California and will spend several wceka In Memo Park and Los Angeles Social Club The Social club of Prosperity Roheknh lodge will meet In the IOOF hnll on Wednesday, Postponed Zlon Lutheran Ladles Aid meeting has been !' postponed until January 30, It was announced today. City Delivery Service. Ph. 8417 CONSTIPATED? SO WAS THIS MAN Found relief after eating; famous breakfast cereal Wleh you could do away with fcarth laxatives forever? Then rad this sincere, unsolicited let tar: "I taut to tak loiatlm mr slekt Iwfor ffnin to herl, Then a friend tM thou! XrXMMtf'R Al.l,BRAN en I Ufl MUni It for hnwkfavt everr day. Now I am m rertlar an elftrkwflelt. I ink AMi-MlAN le """k Ita wrifht In eMI" Mr. Khner ttraliiford. 11 LlnMln Annta, Norrletown. Fa. Yom, ton, may never have to take a harfth laxative again if ?nu suffer from constipation due o lack of bulk in the diet. KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN has brought lasting1 reliof to thousands Buffering1 from this typo of con stipation. For host results eat ALL-BRAN dally an a cereal or In muffins and drink plenty of water. Try it I If not eompMely satisfied after ton days, send the empty carton to tho Kellogg Com pany. Battle Crook, Michigan, and get ttoublt your money back. KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN la not a purgative hut a wholesome food marie from the vitnl outer layers of wheat.. Ask your grocer for nfibbUUtt'B ALb-flKAfS teewy. Daughter Born Mr. and Mra. JoHrph J, Voyc, 1S04 Fulton, arc parents of a daughter, tholr sec ond girl, born at Klamath Val ley Hospital Tuesday, January 21, Voyo la tho son of Mra, A. J. Voyo, pioneer resident of thla city. Voyo la employed ut Cascade Industrial Supply, Luncheon Sojourners will moot at tho Wlllurd hotel Wed nesday at 12:30 p.m. for a no hostess luncheon. After a short business meeting at 1:49 p.m., bridge and pinochle will be played. All newcomers to Klam ath Fulls are Invited to attend. In Hoapltal Frank Gross. Langoll valley cattleman, la a patient at Hlllsldo hospital where he Is recovering irom pneumonia. Gross has been In the hospital for several days and la reported to be Improv ing. Benefit Kappa chanter of Beta Sigma lJh! sorority, will sponsor a benefit card parly at tiio Wlnema hotel tomorrow night, Wcdmwdiiy, at 8 o'clock. Kusorvallons may bo niado with Mra. Kltlnn I'hair. Klamath County chamber of commerce. Returns Homo Mrs. Louise Wl Ik-It. 2UD4 Kberleln. was moved from Klamath Valley hospital by ambulance Monday at 1 1). in. In hrr hnnie Mra Wllletl has been a patient at tho Hospital lor tho past 23 daya. Surgery Robert Hcsslg. 8- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hce.nlg, 410 Hlllsldo, had surgery for mastoid at Klamath Valley hospital Tues day morning, iiessig is an cm ploye of Big Lakca Box com. pany. Grange Meeting Merrill grange will hold ita regular meeting Monday, January 27. Members are urged to be present at this Important meeting. Re freshments will be served at tho Close ot bualncss. To Hospital M. E. Jones, 005 Victory drive, was moved by ambulance from hla home to Hillside hospital at 0:40 a. m. Monday. Jonea la suffering from a acvere attack of Influenza. Builneaa Trl Wllllnm Cun ningham and A. R. Campbell of Klamath Falla are In Harney county thla week on bualness for the Klamath Production Credit aasoclatlon. rrom Cervallla Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Llndsey and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Skinner have returned from a brief trip to Corvallls, Trip Upstate County Judge U. E. Rceder is now on a trip to Salem and rnrtland and la cx peeled back thla week-end. Probation Break Brings Arrest Standing on hla constitutional rights apparently did Arthur Laccr no good at all last night. The 42-ycar-old resident of Klamath annex on S. 0th is on probation from the city jail un der instructions to stay out of bar and beer halls for 30 daya, but about 0:30 laat night he was apotted ot the Mecca by a city patrolman. There were strong Indications that Lager had been ignoring the provision In his probation order, according to police report, and not the least of these was Lager's questioning of police authority. He told the patrolman he could drink if he so chose, in tact, that it was his constitutional right to drink In beer taverns. Lager is In the city lockup to day, charged with violation of probation. CARD OF THANKs' We wlah to extend our heart felt thBnks and appreciation for the acts of kindness, the mes sages of sympathy and the many beautiful floral offerings during our recent bereavement, the loss of our mother and grandmother. M.. and Mm, Leslie A. Cutting Mr. Arthur Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Buckmlller Mr. and Mrs. Willis A. Glidden Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cooper rT. ( A SWITCH .without A-;ri ' Bltl 1 man Tur Switch la WADHAMS... I. a tvnlth Is janutn old-laihionid eofUs geodnsis ... to the cup ol eolloe you've bten Maching for- or your money back. Don't risk a penny looking further. SOtO IV INDIPiNDfNT CROUDS i IN TINS AND RE-U5ABK JAM Q U Alt AN TIE Fjl ( Ivtrv aovnfl c! WA0HAMS COFMllXg II OUMANT1ID le lve you Hlgkell It ! f I Solliletlifln, tt you' Mono v,i!t belli1 llr Refunded k, your Goiter, ' , I Merrill Yater Main Work Slated MKHHILL. Jan. 21 Increased and better water service for the people of Merrill Is promised wllli the Installation of a new water tank and water mnlns. Recent conferences, of the city's water commission wllh S. C. Walklns, engineer ussocluted with tho A. D. Harvey ossociato engineers, Medford, Indicate that work on tho Improvement proj cct will get tinder way In tho near future. Lack of dIdc of a size suffi cient to handle tho Increased de mand for water haa held up the work, authorized last fall by ap proval or a aso.ooo bond issue. Tho water commission which Includes Paul Lewis. T. W. Chat- burn and Robert Dragoo expect tp Install a new $30,000 atecl water tank and tower, probably on a new location In the rear of the community hall which the city acquired some months ago. The wooden tank has been lo cated since It was first built at tho rear of the Scogglns building now occupied by biifcway. it haa a capacity of 33.000 gallons. A six inch cast iron main will be laid when fittings are avail able "looping" tho town and ex tending to tne industrial urea across tho Groat Northern tracks. Four-Inch mains will be laid down the alleys. Shut off connectlona will also be Installed to be used in an emergency so that only a small section of the city will be out of service. Knife. Fork Hears Farmer The American farmer's prt penalty for "slttin" and thlnkfn' haa a profound effect on Ihe country a destiny. Wllliard May berry, Kansas farmer and bush neasman, told tho Knife and Fork club last night In an after-dinner talk at the Wlllard hotel. Mayberry, expounding a grass roots philosophy reminiscent of the late Will Rogers, described the contribution of the American farmer to political and economic stability. Farmers, he said, are 'like the town clock in the thunder storm," they go right on ticking through all the excite ment of political and economic upheavals, calmly certain that in the long run things will turn out all right. The Bpeaker said that a farmer must be a poet, a producer and a pragmatist. Making three blades of grass grow where one ?rew before is fundamental in a armer's nature, he aaid, a fact overlooked by Henry Wallace In advancing his unsuccessful "econ omy of scarcity." Mayberry said that farmers likewise do not agree with that school of thought which believes that liberty and security are In compatible. "We do not see any conflict there," lie said. "On the farm we Intend to have both." Mayberry was introduced by Dick Hcnzel, Klamath farmer and member of the Knife and Fork club. Classified Ads Bring Results. NOW AVAILABLE! PRESTO, UNIVERSAL and EKCO WEAR COOKERS These art the papular 5-qt. saucepan size. We alio have Ihe Universal in the 7-qt. canning size. GET YOURS NOW WHILE THE SUPPLY LASTS! SWAN LAKE MOULDING CO. 3226 So. 6th " 17 appetizing tG$GDT Grapefruit t DeMrt Sun Make Finer Flavor Deurt grapefruit mint ice. ..Desert grapefruit prune bread. ..Desert grapefruit hot punch jurt J of 17 excitingly diffcrtnt recipes for Des ert grapefruit. They're yours for the asking in Ihe new Desert recipe booklet. Write for it today. Desert grapefruit-in salads, appetiiera fwl jMHIrt, II.il I ,JJ .... , 1 1 . L , win. uvhv,-wiii HUU fil IIIIU IlCttlin lO vour menus three mrjllt Avrv Haw Desert Grapefruit Industry, 746 South Central Avenue, Lot Angeles 21, California. lGG CAIIFOINIA. Boy Scout Heads Here See Big Growth A new milestone in the Boy Scout program was Indicated last week at the planning confer nuco of tho Klamath but in dis trict Scout committee. The dis trict ended the year with S31 buy In the Scouting program In .'13 different troops, cub packs and senior Scout units. Setting an objective for 1947 of 1110 buys In 44 different groups throughout the basin, the committee plans an activity pro gram for tho year which will surpass any previous program. Among theso activities will be a district rally In March to be held In Merrill, a Camporee In April, participation In the coun- s Modoc Rendezvous in May, Bummer cump In July and Aug ust, a rally and court of Honor in late September and the an nual Boy Scout circus In early December. , District officers, named by election In December, were sup plemented by men appointed by Chairman Jamea Patterson at last week s session. Patterson Concert To Be Held Tonight Famed 'Cellist Grogor Piatl- gorsky will be presented to night, Tuesday, at 8 o'clock at the Pelican theatre by the Com munlty Concert association. No seats will be reserved and only membership tickets will be hon ored. Piatlgorsky will be accom panied by Ralph Bcrkowitz at the piano. The program will Include "Divertimento," Franz Josef Haydn; "Sonata In E Minor, Op. 38," Johannes Brahms: "In troduction Theme and Varia tions, Opus 82, No. 2," Franz Schubert; "Mallnconla," Jean Sibelius; "Allegro Appaaionato, Op 43," Camille Saint-Sacns; "Nocturne in C-Sharp Minor (Op. Posthumous)", Frederic Chopin: "Danse Of Terror." from "El Amor Brulo," Manuel de Falla: "March," from "Pieces for Children. Op. 85," Sergei Prokoficff; "Variations in Pop ular Style on a Theme of Pa ganinl," Piatigorsky. Hit-, Run Driver Posts Bail Anthony G. Vlastakis. 24, 2015 Oregon avenue, arrested on a warrant yesterday for failure to stop at the scene or an accident,, has Dostcd $50 bail with city police for an appearance in court. He is accused of being Involved in a hit and run accident on Klamath avenue late Saturday with a parked ca owned by Fred Abbev. 030 Lincoln. Walter Eugene Nuckolls, 337 E. Main, was arrested this morn ing for failure to yield the right of w'ay at an Intersection and is to be in court tomorrow. CHAN, WHITE rm CHEST RUB REIKVES COIDS' MISERIES Many modern mothers are chang ing from old-fashioned remedies to clean, white, atainleaa, medicated PENETROSRUB ways to serve " t Mm KIZONA . In Near Future named Clict Ilamaker to another year as chairman of the organi zation and extension committee, Dr. Richard Currln as advance ment chairman, Cecil Barkdoll as chairman of leadership train ing, M. Ernest MacUcth as health and safety chairman, and Ray Worden as chairman of camping and activities. Hcber Radcllffe as district commissioner for another year will bo assisted by a staff consisting of Loy Barker, Chct Berman, Gomcr Jones, Harvey Woodurd, Cliff Macy, Dick Miller Jr., Paul Tanner and Milt Sesslcr. These men will work in direct unit contact, specializing in program assist ance to Scoutmasters, Cub masters and senior leaders. Council President K. G. Klalin spoke in conclusion about the necessity of assuring to every boy in the Scouting program the kind of activity he expected. Klahn, having completed in two weeks a tour of the four district planning conferences in cluding meetings in Alturas, Lakeview and Bena, expressed confidence that the goals set will be attained. Scout Executive Bob Lamott introduced John A. Raffctto Jr., ae 'the third professional mem ber of the Modoc Area council staff to serve with Lamott out of the headquarters office in Klamath Falls. Raffetto will serve Lake and Modoc counties and part of Klamath county, par ticularly Klamath county com munities outside of Klamath Falls. The other staff member serves out of Bend as a center for the Fremont district of thu council. The council closed the year with 1654 boys in 64 Scouting groups spread over an area of 40,000 square miles of southern and central Oregon and northern California country. The area covers Klamath, Lake, De schutes, Crook and Jefferson counties In Oregon and Modoc nnri Dart of Siskiyou counties in California. The membership to tal at the end of 1046 is more than 500 per cent gain over 1042 and about a 10 per cent gam over 1045. Klamath Basin Students Honored Klamath and Lake county vnnths are continuing to distin guish themselves away from home with six of them making the honor roll at SOCE, Ash. land, last quarter. Robert McLean, Dclbert Yan tis and James Young of Klam ath Falls, Walter Foster and Warren Foster of Keno. and Paul Lerwick of Lakeview, all made the honor roll of Southern Ore. gon College of Education by ob taining a 3.3 grade or above, word received today stated. The 1947 winter cauliflower crop is expected to set a new record. We Are Eedmickg Prices of AM Ford Cars As Much as $50 on Some Models " Effective Immediately ,A Statement by Henry Ford II "Although more than one million of our customers are waiting for delivery of their cars at present prices, we are immediately reducing the price of every Ford car some models as much as $50. "This is our 'down payment' toward a continued high level of production and employment in the months ahead.' We believe that the 'shock treatment of prompt action is needed to halt the insane spiral of mounting costs and rising prices and to restore a sound base for the hopeful period of postwar production we are now entering. "Let me review briefly the considerations which have led us to take this important step. "The Ford Motor Company is In the mass production business. Mass production depends upon large markets. It will continue to succeed only if It can produce more and more at lower and lower cost so that more and more people can buy. Large markets begin to disappear when prices rise. "The un-American spiral of mounting costs and rising prices has hurt everybody some groups more than others. Many have not benefited from postwar wage increases, but have had to share the burden of resulting higher prices. Already, millions of American families are unable to buy the things which, in normal times, make up their standard of living. In the short view, we can see inflation. In the long view, there is danger of depression. "The period since V-J Day has been an unhappy and costly period of reconversion to peacetime production. Ford Motor Company has lost millions of dollars since V-J Day, even after all tax adjustments. "But the crisis of this wild aftermath of war seems to have been passed. Our own production, though still Calif. Plate Sales Slow TULELAKE. Jan. 21 Only .?0 per cent of applications for 1847 vehicle license plates on the 2000 pleasure cara and trucks, registered in the Tule lake area have been applied for, according to Gerald Wilson, California highway patrolman, for the deadline on February 4. The Tulelake motor vehicle office Is understaffed and should a run be made at the end ot the and drivers are asked not to wait grace period, many driven will be disappointed. Car owners at Dorrls also make application .at this office and properly signed application slips for any number of vehicles may be presented by one indi vidual to save mileage. There is no office operated in Dorris for the convenience of motorists. No license plates will be is sued at this time, these to be mailed out later from the Sacra mento office. Temporary wind shield sticker are being issued. NO PINK MOOSE BOSTON, Jan. 21 (JO The eyes or tsosiomans nurrymu along busy Boyision street, popped yesterday at the sight of a moose up in the air. Their vision obscured by fog and rain, the pedestrian saw at a second look that it was a stuffed Mooso being lowered by block and tackle from the second story of the New England Mu seum of Natural History. The antlered creature Ignoble descent was necessary to clear the second floor for a women s fashion shop. He was too large to negotiate the stairs. Classified Ada Bring Results. GOING TO MARKET! Anyone having goods on lay away, or wishing special or ders, pleas drop in or tele phone, e Shop Will Be Closed ' From Jan. 23 to Feb. 2nd. ART NEEDLEWORK SHOP su SUI Friendly Helpfulness To Every Creed and Purs Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite M. Ward and Sons 92S High Phono 3334 KKALO NSW I. Klamstk Folio, Ore. Music Of Spheres Proves Old Pythagorean Belief By J. HUGH PRUETT Tho discussion of the "music of the spheres" In this column last month brought the sugges tion from some readers that per haps the Pythagorean philoso phers ot ancient Greece and many astronomers of later times were really quite near the truth when they taught that the motions of the planets produced actual musical tones. These read- feel that all celestial order and action result In a vast and majestic harmony that is closely akin to music. If we fail to sense it, the fault Is with our power of perception. We may even be at tuned to these universal har monies, but atlll not recognize their source. Mr. H. R. H. of Portland won ders if in "thoughts silently out of the night" there is thus "flow ing the thread of a lyric being spun out of the Eternal Blue, striving for pattern and form and weaving the Infinite Voice eager for speech and utterance." Mrs. D. P. D., also of Portland, thus declares her faith: "Per haps I am a Pythagorean. Why, of course there Is music In the universe. Because our puny little ears can hear only certain tones doesn't prove that others are not there. That marvelous display of tne aurora, which I watched from my home on a hill in the early morning hours a few years MENTHOLATUM tllT.TtMontlwlotiimCoauony.lBfc ; USID FOR OVER SO YIAR8 TO COMFORT COLDSI limited by material shortages, is now steadier. Produc tivity of our employes, which hit a new low during the period, seems to have started its return to normal. Ford Motor Company made a modest profit for the last three months of 1946, and we intend to continue to operate in the black. "The American economy now stands at a turning point Mounting costs and rising prices have warranted caution and hesitancy. There is even general fear that this danger ous, un-American cycle cannot be corrected without an economic recession. We think this fear can be dispelled by common sense and action. And among free men that becomes an individual responsibility. "The Ford Motor Company therefore proposes to accept its losses since V-J Day as an hem of the cost of a great and victorious war. We are closing our books on that phase of our production history. We have decided that now is the time for us to make an Investment in the future. "Because they must build up depleted cash reserves or because they are still losing money, many businesses may not be able to follow suit. But we hope that our suppliers, our employes, and our other economic partners will back, each to his own ability, our attempt to return to the economic pattern which has helped to make America great the principle that higher wages and a higher standard of living for all depend upon lower costs and lower prices through Increasingly efficient large-scale production. "We hope, as we move forward, that we will be able to reduce prices further, and that we will not be forced to raise them again to compensate for cost increase" PRESIDENT, Tt'SSDAT, 1mm. II, 1M1. r,o floe ago, was at time Ilk a great symphony. I didn't just make up the thought; It Impressed Itself on my whole being, just as musia that Is almost too grand and ex quisite to bear. I was seeing the tones and harmonies that I could not hear. "It is my belief not just flight of fancy that musical compositions that endure through the centuries wer in the first place harmonies of the universe captured by the sou la of the composers. I believe it was Mozart who, when asked how he created his beautiful music, In sisted that he had no feeling ot creating the melodies, but that he was merely th Instrument through which they flowed; that when the music came, it just came and ho couldn't say from where. "One day recently In a large and busy office, someone con nected a little radio, with built in aerial, to the electric circuit. The sweetest music played. And I marveled how in the din and uproar, and within the heavy walls of the building, there that music was vibrating around us all the time and we hadn't known It. "Beauty of colors, music and rhythm of the universe are, I firmly believe, all parts of the same thing which is of course beyond my comprehension." in a vise? ACHiiv muscles) f-Jl Poor little chest muscle so sore tram hard coughing it hurt her to breathe? Quick, Mentholatum. Bub it on chest, back, neck. It gently atimulating action help . lessen congestion without irritating child' delicate normal akin. Also It comforting; . vapor get down into irritated bronchial tubes leeaen coughing epaama. FORD MOTOR COMPANT