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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1947)
WEATHER NOHTIItllN CAI.irOHNIA Partly llmitly amrams iwirlhtrti purllon and llaar alaawliara axcaut muriiing fog Itxlay, ilHraaiiig olmiiflnaaa luitlght ana unUiiy Willi light ralit aMtraina north rn portion Ula tonight or Sunday. Ultla vhahga Iti lamparatura, gantla io ntiMltialt iinrlhwa.larly wind oil eiMtt. Bamming mudaiala loutharly north ot furl rlragg WAHIllnuTON AND OIIKCION rOBIt. CAHla -Llouuy wild lnl.imltl.nl light rain today, tonight and eunday, llfta. lamuarauiia vhanga. I'ra.h to ttrong mulnwoiltrly wlnJai or gait forog naar aioulh of Columbia rlvar today. Laav on Tilp Mr. mid Mri. Iluilli Killim-ycr left at noon SmIu rdiiy by motor fur month') vucnlhm trip which will take Ilium flrot to Log Anuclm where they will be Julmid by Kill nioyvr's uncle, Kdtllo Morn. Kroiu there they plun to vlalt at til and Cltnyon nntlo:il park, llotilder diiin, and then on to I'llUlniriili, fit., whero they will peiul two weekg with Kill niryer'a parent, Mr. and Mrg. Krcd Klllmvycr, Sr. They plnn to return viu Chicaifo, Mrg. Kill nieyer Ig the goclely editor of The Herald and Newg, and Kill nieyer li with the Southern Pacific. Return Mra. l.uno Warren of Kldtirudo gtn-tit returned homo by bus Uat nlg-lil from Prlnevlllo where alio, wag called by the gerluus lllnen of her mother Mrg. l.udvlu Peteraon, now it luttleut nt Prlnevlllo hoa pltiil and recoverlnii from major aui'iiery. Mrg. Petergon, former realdent of thia city, will be con fined to her bed for at leant two inonthg but her condition la re ported greatly Improved. Vlill Home Frleuda of Na omi Klmacy are looking for ward to her vlglt home from Sim Kranciaco February 1. Mlaa Klntaey left Klamath Falla laat j cur lor the bay city where ahc la working- and attending art achnol. She will vlalt with her mother, Mra. Lentire R. Klin aey, 307 Hill, and other relatives In Hoipltal Member of the Kunlea auxiliary and frlenda learned thla week that Mr. Urscl Uraltun, formerly of Klamath Fall and now of Ger ber, Calif., I a patient at Mercy hoapltal in Ked Bluff. DUmlssed Walter Ethrldjio, employe of Camp 8. Weyerhaeus er Timber company, waa releaaed Saturday morning from Hillside hoapltal where lie hag received treatment fur recent Injury auatalned when he waa hit by a falling tree. Moved To City Mr. and Mra. Frank Groha of Langell valley have moved to a hotel In Klam ath Falla. Groha waa In the Klamath Valley hoapitnl recent ly with pneumonia. Surgery Mr'. Grace Cleek, 2430 Pershing Way, la a patient at lilllalde luuptta) where he had major an r gory Friday after noon. Mra. Cleek la a long time realdent of thla city and mother of Jack and Hugh Cleek, driver for Pat'i Cab. .Villi Klamath Gueat of the Cheater Herman, Marlon apart ment, loft lint night to return to their home In Chicago aftor three-day vlalt here. They were Berman'i undo, Alfred Q. SwarU, and two frlenda, Nate Gordon and Eugone M. Larch, They (topped In Palm Spring on the way here and are returning through Montana and Mlnneaola. All three of the vlaltor expreaaed extremely fa vorable opinion of Klamath Fall. Interacting Work Civil erv Ico examination will be held oon for bureau of reclamation poaltlon at ilU44 per annum In Oregon, Waihlngtun, Califor nia, Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, North Da. kota, Kanaaa, Oklahoma and Texas. Full Information may be obtained from L. t. Propal, at tho Klamath Fall poat of fice. Dlscua Meaaure The Coun cil of Republican Women will meet lit 1:13 p. m., Monday, Jan uary 27, at the Pelican cafo. There will he a diacuaaion of meaaurca before the dale Icgis lature and a report on the an nual meeting held at Portland. Home rrom Alaaka Mr. Charle McGowan of Anchorage, Alaaka, 1 vlaltlug here with her parent, Mr. and Mra. R. G. Lilly, of 3803 Frelda. Mr. Mc Gowan ha been In Alaaka for ome time where her huaband i in radio work. Pneumonia Yayne Welch. 2-year-old on of Clifford Welch of Sprague River, employe of the American Box compuny, wa ad ...UU..I in llll'ilrlo hnailltal Fri day afternoon for treatment of bronchial pneumonia. To Weodburn Mr. and Mr. r,iii niarkiner left todav for a week-end trip to Woodburn and Eugene, mra. umcamcr, Juvenile "officer, I delivering two Klamath Falla youth to the date boy' training school at Woodburn. Another Week Circuit Judge David R. Vandenberg, now in court in Portland, will probably be working In Portland for another week, court official here have learned. To Arliona Mr. and Mr. Bill Griffith of Seattle and Mra. La Rue Horn of Bonanra left Wednesday morning for Phoenix. Aril., to be with their father who la recovering from a acrlou operation. Corvallli Meeting All offi cer and eacort of Women of the Mooae who plan to attend the meeting at Corvalll. Feb ruary 1, are aked to practice Tuesday, Ja-.tuary 28. 7:30 p. m. Aloha Chapter There will be a meeting of Aloha chapter, 1 Order of tho Eastern Star, at 8 p, ni Tuesday, January 28. : All member and vlsting mem ber are cordially Invited. Return Home Ray Byrne , Sr., 1123 Crescent, wa able to leavo lilllalde hospital Saturday morning following medical treatment. Pilgrim Holiness Church Wan'Jand at Division Service! Sunday School ti4S A.M. Worship lliOO A.M. Evangelistic 7i30 P.M. Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7:30 P.M. Rev. SHERMAN MOORE, MinUter 232S Eberleln Phone 3433 CARNIVAL B Dick Turner StAuTlCrVtS L-n'MAMI INITMIN " ' ' so i f a-. y F "r - . - n - . a r -yj V . -W ! a ' OOHI, 1HT jT tat sHC T It WO. V. f T. Off Ml old Fathtr Timt U getting in his dirty work!' New Men In Landry Firm Paul O. Landry, pioneer in aurance firm operator of The Landry company, thla week an nounced two additional mem bers of Ills firm, Erneat M. Mac Beth and V. T. Johnson. MacBeth has been a Klamath Falla resident the past four year and came hero from Ak ron. O., where he had received commercial training. He has been with the Southern Pacific and Safeway organization be fore Joining The Landry com pany. MacBeth' wife and two mall children live in Klamath Falla. The other new member of the firm, Johnson, waa associat ed with the department of school lands In Oklahoma and lived in Texas before coming here. He waa formerly with Co lumbia Utilities company. Mrs. Johnson, their two sons and one daughter, make up the fam ily. The Landry company waa es tablished here 22 year ago. Returns Home Floyd Shot well. 340 Cypres, left Hillside hospital Saturday to return to hia home. Shotwcll is recovering from a recent appendectomy. He I an employe of Ewauna Box company. Leave Hospital Mra. George Yost of Tulelake returned to her ranch home Saturday after major aurgcry at Hillside hospital. Microscopic organisms include fungi, bacteria and viruses. P-80 Collision Kills Two Pilots MARCH FIELD, Calif., Jan. 25 iPi The collision of two P-80 Jet planes ihortly after their takeoff here yesterday killed the pilot. Dead are Lt. Ronald R. Ricci, 23, Norwalk, Conn., and Mai. Felix D. Williamon, 2S, Cor dele, Ga. Williamson' plane disinte grated, Ricci wa destroyed by lire after it crashed from a spin. The plane collided SOO feet above a point two and one-half mile northwest of here. Plenty Of Smoke But No Fire The heavy smoke out over S. 6th about noon today wasn't por tentous of any disaster one of the cause wa a small grass fire In the swampy area between S. 6th and Lake Euwana. Smoke from the grass fire was Joined in the overhanging clouds by the usual output from various Indu-Jtrlal smokestack around town and the resulting volume looked from a distance like a first-class blaze was going. Telephone at the fire depart ment, police station and The Herald and Now were delused with anxious queries, but there was much more smoke than fire. The combined soring: and fall pig crop of 1946 is estimated at 83,201.000 head. This number is about four per cent below the 1949 crop and ia the smallest crop since 1940. However, it is about one per cent larger than the 10-year average. (Continued From Pago One) Industries of the ephemeral kind war build. Shipyards, for example. Definitely, It brought buck ban t ranciaco a former place in the economy of the 11 Western itatcs. Once again San Francisco I bursting at the seams. She 1 resurgent aa after the earth quake and the fire. It la an interesting sight. This writer will probably be unable to resist the temptation to tell more of what 1 happen ing here. Nazi Death Sentence Is Appealed (Continued from Page One) trial which is not mirrored in our American war record, both in Europe and the Pacific," he complained. He said the war department should review the case and that President Truman should con firm or alter the sentence. In all, 73 defendants were con victed laat July of putting 730 American prisoner and ISO Bel gian civilian to death during the battle of the Ardennen bulge In the winter of 1944. Thirty of them, however, were given prison terms ranging from 10 years to life. Witnesses at the trial, some of them soldiers who managed to escape the massacre, testified that Col. Joachim Peiper, one of those condemned to the gal lows, gave an order before the offensive opened that no pris oners were to be taken and that he ordered exhausted and dis armed American soldiers shot after they surrendered. Flaming' Gasoline Blocks Highway BEND, Jan. 25 lP) Flames blocked the Central Oregon highway 10 mile east of Bend for six hours yesterday. They sprang from 7000 gal lons of gasoline from ah over turned tank-trailer, owned by the Oltman Transfer company, Bums. A large section of the asphalt-surfaced road wa Ignit ed. Traffic detoured through Juniper forest. The owner estimated loss at $22,000. Fire Victim Said Improved Today Slight improvement was not ed today in the condition of. 15-year-old Peggy Blake, daugh ter of Mr, and Mr. L. F. Spen c e r of Tulelake, seriously burned in a fire Tuesday night which took the life of her lit tle -step-brother, Tommy Spen cer. Spencer said Saturday morn ing that Peggy's condition was anmnnolnff ainrl that ha had spent a good night at Klamath. Valley hospital where she has been a patient since the fire. asALP wsws. ai.m.ia r.iu, ora. SATuaBAt, jaa. , imj. ta ta Legislative Roundup Shows Solons racing Huge Tax, Budget Problems By PAUL W. HARVEY, jr. SALEM, Jan. 25 IA') The two-weeks-old 44th Oregon legis lature, faced with budget and tax problems of record propor tions, had good idea today ot the menu of proposed new laws it must consider before going home in some seven or eight week. Next week it will begin mov ing, with the tax and appropria tion committees starting to work Tuesday on cracking the tough deficit problem, upon which reit the question of whether the session will be long or short. Ways and means committee members say there might be a budget deficit of as much as $22,000,000 if liquor profits drop as much as the liquor commis sion expects. So it's up to the tax committees to decide which of the long list of proposed new taxes to adopt to meet the def icit. But it Isn't as simple as all that, because almost, any tax that amounts to anything is bound to be referred to the peo ple, delaying its effective date. And there's good chance that the people woulda't go for added taxes. The tax proposals now on hand include a retail sales levy, taxet on gambling devices, amusements, tobacco, soft drinks and gross business receiDts: and stlffer levies on individual in comes and liquor. Adoption of the community property system, . to- aid more wealthy married couple to get into lower federal income tax brackets by splitting their in come, also 1 proposed. Following is a summary of other major legislation now be fore the legislature, including measures which have been- in troduced as well as bills that are expected: Schools -Distribution to school districts of the $15,000. 000 state school support fund, bigger teachers salaries, reduc ing from 18 to 16 the minimum age at which a child can leave school. Labor Anti-closed ahop con stitutional amendment, labor sponsored measures to in crease unemployment compensa tion and industrial accidont ben. efiu. . Liquor Licensing veterans' liquor clubs. Drooosals for stricter enforcement, permitting coun appeals irom liquor com mission rulings, and to allow sale over the bar in clubs by using script books. Highways Making perman ent , the temporary wartime higher limit on length and weight ot trucks, increasing gas oline) tax to expand road build ing program, establishing free way or limited access high ways', regulating used car deal ers, and Increasing highway commission from three to five memberf. Local government Setting up county planning and zoning com missions, and giving more road funds to countiea and cities. ' Forestry Creating $12,000, 000 10-year statewide conserva tion program to be financed by tax of 20 cents a thousand feet on all timber cut. Veterans Increasing ceiling on veterans' farm and home loans from $3,000 to $6,000. Retirement Make the state employes retirement law com pulsory for counties cities and other state sub-divisions. Salaries Increaaing salaries of state employes and officials, and virtually all county officers. Game and flah Bocst fees for non-resident hunting and an gling licenses, and prohibit com mercial fishing in Columbia river to persons who are not residents of Washington or Ore gon. Old age pensions Monthly average is $45. American pen sion committee wants $50 mini mum, and Town-send organiza tion want $75 minimum. State government organiza tionConsolidating forestry de partment and game and fish commissions, combining banking and corporation 'departments, anri -havintf oru.man tax com- mission. Institutions Giving state hos pitals, prison' and training schools more funds; creating boys' forest camps for first of fenders, and constructing state reformatory. Higher education Providing more, funds,: facilities and In structors for unlventlty and' cot icxe, wmcn nave record enroll ment of veteran. - rambling Proponed conatl tutlonal amendment to leializa aiiiUllllK. LEGAL NOTICES N OTIC I or CALL rOB BIDS Klimilh Cs)nly (Vhe! Dielrlet Nolle It hereby .riven. In como llano wim otcuon lii-iaiM ut. UA.. trim tn Board of Director of KUmath Countr Schoo'. Dtetrlct ol Klamath County, Or ton hereby Invitei bide tor the follow Ing: t Pure he of 50,000 tailor of gaioline) lor tha current year: 3 Pur char of too cord of wood for ChU quln School. Specification! may bj obtained from fhe office of Klamath County Mehom Dlitrlct. Klamath fall.. Oregon. Scaled blda will be received try lh Board up to and Including 3:00 o otoott p. m. on the 0th day of February. IMt, Klamath Falla, Oregon, and publicly opened. The Board renerve the light to refuM any or all blda. W n. PERKINS. Clerk. J. lt-23-25 NO. MX 11 ? si 1 1 j Derby's w L Music Co. a S 120 W. 7th 22 Years of Insurance Service Brings an Expansion of NEXT TIME TRY THI First Baptist Church FOB FRIENDLINESS and FELLOWSHIP North Ith and Washinaton Sts. CECIL C. BROWN, Pastor SUNDAY SERVICES: 1:45 a, m. Sunday School for all eg. Including -nursery. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship :1S p. m. Training Union for all group. 7:30 p. m Evening Worship. COME TO CHURCH SUNDAY CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Baiamant Auditorium of Public Library, Sth and Klamath Affiliated with Southern laptlit Convention SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A. M. MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A. M. TRAINING UNION :15 P. M. EVENING WORSHIP 7:30 P. M. MIDWEEK SERVICE, WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.M. Woman' MUiionary Union Evory Thursday 2:00 P.M. Come and Worship With Us Everyone Welcome Klamaih Falls' New and Frtendly Church "beauty is your birthright.' says Miss Colvm , helena rubinstein representative here, starting Mon., Tues., Wed., Jan. 27, 28, 29 If it's beauty you're seeking, see Mias Colvin, Helena Rubinstein's personal representative sent to help you find more .beauty than you may ever have dreamed possible. She solves your skin problems. She charts your most flattering make-up colors. She gives you a com plcte beauty analysis. It's all personal! It's all wonderful! What's more, your time is all you have to spend. CURRIN'S- for Jr tigs Sth and Main Phan 4S14 Jt: - tine V. T. J" "In ordt to continue giving the tyy of (arvlca on which thi Insurance business vas built and has properd. I have associated with mystlf Mr. Ernest M. MacBeth And Mr. V. T. Johnson. Mr. MacBeth had commercial education in Akron, Ohio, and has been with Safeway tad the Southern Pacific since coming here. Mr. Johnson was with the Oklahoma department of school lands before joining Columbia Utilities In Klamath. The three of us will devote our full time to the Insurance service et The Landry Co." Paul Q. awktf 1U I AM MY C. PROPERTY AUTO FIRE LIABILITY INSURANCE Phona 312 41 M.l St. Tha Courthoma It Now One Block Down Tho Stfoot From Our Offico