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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1948)
r IS PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MONDAY, JAN. 3, 194B imiMt Maiinaaa n.iir i i:" r. u. lit . :l-11:00 P. M. TODAY MAOICAl MUSICALI bmmd DENNIS MORGAN ..in.li ma . AMINf III C.I.I TltMHICOlOI."fj Watch For "Duel Th, Sun' Start Jan. 18th Jaycees Set For Election Of Officers Service Club Programs Junior chamber of commerce, Monday 8:30 p.' m. Wlnema hotel. Lions club, Tuesday noon. Wll lard hotel. 20-30 club. Tuesday 7 p. m. Willard hotel. Soroptimlst club. Thursday noon. Pelican cale. Rotary club, Friday noon. Wil lard hotel. Kiwanis club. Saturday 6:30 p. m. Willard. Airmen Rescued In Alcska B29 Crash 1 a... i M U . W Hatlntr. Ually .1 l:M P. M. tv. 6:I4-:M P. M. NOW "HER HUSBAND'S AFFAIRS" Franchot Tone Lucille Ball Edward Everett Horton riark Gable Vivian Leigh Gone S? Wind1 In Color by Technicolor One Full Week Starting January 11th I 1 I l MMIHW v ENDS TODAY In. Shan CIS-.. T. M. Car? Grant - Jhi Arthnr "ONLY ANGELS HAVE WINGS" Also "ADAM HAD 4 SONS" 1 First meetings of the year for most of the clubs will be devoted to bus iness, elections and installations of officers. Jaycees will hold election and the 20-30 club installation with Pete Green as the new president. Bob Hall as first vice president, Rex Rogers, second vice president. The Kiwanis installation party at the Willard will be held Saturday i evening and there will be no Thurs day meeting. Refreshments at 6:30 p. m.. dinner at 8. Mike Houser will be general chairman in charge of arrangements with John Houston as toasunaster. Ted Reeves is the incoming president and Jack Schulze ' is vice president. Soroptimists will have a business meeting and no program. A financial summary of 1947 and the financial outlook for 1948 will , probably be the topic of Mitchell I Tillotson, manager of the First National bank, in his address to the Lions club. Frank Eberlein of the Klamath club will talk on "Rotary Informa- I tion" at the week's Rotary meeting. TOMORROW AND WEDNESDAY j$ojtai.Mn.e HYGIENE PRODUCTIONS presents ALL-STAR HOLLYWOOD CAST .'MWaWfa ENDS TODAY . B.b.rt Y.anf in They Won't Believe Me" an Jon Hall in "Last of The Red Men" Continuoui Shows Daily From 12:30 P. M. TOMORROW Adults Only! Actually Filmed In "Ball." ISLE OF EXOTIC WOMEN! "Sins Of New Classes At OVS Open Two new classes opening this morning at the Oregon Vocational school were jammed with students. Registration opened In a clock and watch repair class under D. D. Shel don, and another in medical tech nology with Charles Martin as In structor. Regular classes resumed today fol lowing a vacation over the holidays. The campus movie theatre will have its first showing tonight, with other movies slated for every Monday night OVS equipment was clearing snow most of today from streets on the campus, covered with a heavy snow on Sunday. The Old Fort road was bladed by county equipment today. if "W " :L . a erV . i Rifle Fired In Play Kills KKATTl.K, Jan. 5 i A l:l-yciii'-olil luiiiquiill boy Wat. wounded fa tally Siituidiiy by a allot from n rule wltii which lie and a youiuter broth, er wcro playing near their home The victim wan Wayne Muirla. son of Mr. and Mln. David R. Mor ris both of whom were reported bv a neighbor to h.vvo bren at their Jobs In Ftentlle at the time of the tragedy. Mr. and Mrs. Ila'iy Woods, tvhn live an eighth of a mile away, said tin wounded boy Mumbled liKo ' their home at 10 r. in., clutchlni 1 1 1 r- chest, and rrlrd: "Dick shot mel" Dick is his 7-ynir-old brother. The Woods rushed the boy to Is siKliiah but were unable to find a doctor. He died in an ambulance en mute to Seattle Basin Students Mako Honor Roll I'Vur Klmmilli bu.Hlu ielilenl, three men nml mil. almlenta "I Houtliein Oiemin inlleite. Iiiudo Hie honor roll liming Die fl '' uiliiliiliiK n Miulght "4" guide iioliil iivi'iiiue. Waller Kuoter of Keuo wii.i one of lour mudenls Hint made III" cIihiiiimI clielc. Two olliein, Ken nel h HiiiiInIiuw of llnimnwi, llli'linnl llliks and t'uryl Vniiitriwnll nl Kluiiiiilh Kulln niiide (lie honor list with a itr.ule point average of 3d or belter while riirryln a remilnr lllllillllllin Mllilv lonil nl ill Irani I'J houis. Twenly-elitlit Mmleiita lliiiile this list. ri'iiHentlng live per rent of the ntuilciil biHiy. OI'ITH ItDHI'.'lllHtd, Jim, B ll't Aiiolher city piillirliiaii has roalgurd III Ilia leoiminlmlloii of th" department" under new Olilrf of I'oltca (Jalvln llulid, liiinier liquor eominhalon uiient at Kliuimth l'nlla, City Manager M. W. rllnkaril aald I'olii'e Desk Hgt, William II, llpham hail realgiieil, tlm aeeoiid officer In quit. Patrolman Hubert Tracy re nlKiiril earlier. Turn those nn-liiuger.tited ar ll Ira Into raah nnwl Herald and News Want Ada ar Inexpenalvt and tiring quick reaulta. Arrowhead Collection Stolen An arrowhead collection coiiuuii. lug some 160 pieces was reported stolen earlier this week from a cabin on the east aide of Upper Klamulli lake owned by Mrs. Wayne Croth era. Si 60 White. D puty Sheriff Marlon J. Haines said that the prowler had rtpied the arrowheads from their mount ings on the walls of the cabin. Ho Was There, Under The House I'OHTl.ANI). Jiill 5 111 PiilUo were very akrptinil when called to the home or llcncvicvc Kiiilth and toll Hiriv was man under hrr house. Hut they lliiiile a routine check -iiiul found she i light, anesllng a vagrant who had curled up under the rioorlhg for an early morning snooze. JANUARY CLEARANCE Boy s Wool Suifi Wool Bloicn Wlndproof Suili Two-Piect Jodhpur Soli Girls'- Have yuu litcreriard mir fire In aunime In the lul t yeura.? If not, give II your Immrdlate atten tion. See lliina Norland fur adiirr. I'!.1 N. Dili St. I'llime tiOHO. Only the tail section and pieces of burned wreckage (topi remained after an army H;9 crashed 9.1 miles north of Nome while on a training flight, but It was home to six of eight fllrra aboard for a week until two daring Alaska bush pilots in small planes made their rescue. Below one of the filers is being helped to one of the rescue planes. These pictures were made by Bud Klrhter. Nome photographer who accompanied the rescue planes, in 30 to 40 degree below sera weather. The pictures were then flown lo Seattle. NEW nWNK.K PORTLAND. Jilll. 5 il'i Store Properties. Inc.. l,oi Angeles, Is the new owner of the Oregonlnu build lug here. The pure was IHWi.ooo. Sule of Uic nine-story bulldluK was announced today by (he nrws paper, which Is to move to a new building, now nearlng completion. PILES si tu:hnh u.v ti;a ii; Nb fit ii N Mi.iilUl.Uit N l.ui ( 1 1 in t'ftiuanfiit Kutilli' OR. E. M. MARSHA I Mr.irat-llt- I'lt It lan N. 1th l:,iiwh. Itir.lia Midi rhun. luta Wool Suili Two-Pioc Jcricy Suits Two-Pioct Values fo 10.98 1 198 SPENCER'S? 619 Main Phono 5497. c Cancer Specialist Trip Still Mystery STOCKHOLM, Jan. s IPi A can cer specialist's mysterious trip to Moscow remained mysterious today. An assistant said Dr. Elis Berven had taken along a set of special in struments "because he thought they might not be available In Russia." The assistant. Dr. Sven Hultbcrg, related: "He told us he had been tele graphically summoned by four Rus sian colleagues for an urgent con sultation and had to leave Immedi ately. He left a lot of work behind him."' Dr. Berven left Saturday, saying he did not know his patient's name. Bridge Builders Race Stork In Marion County Washout ESTATE PORTLAND. Jan. 6 i.Vi-Aii es sti.te of approximately 100 000 was If fl by Ambrose M. Cronln Jr., killed hi the Journal helicopter crash here December 31. His will, admitted to probate yes terday, named his widow as executrix. AUTHORIZED Among the Bantus of South Africa, the women by custom do the farming and a Bantu male who fanned his own land would be re garded as mad by his neighbors. Boyle's Column Circus Saints And Sinners Club Punctures Speakers Unbelievable An Island Dominated By Women! "She Devil's Island" Adults Only! By HALE BOYLE NEW YORK, Jan. Slfl - One of the more grisly ways to put yourself to sleep in America Is to count the sodden cliches made by long-winded after-dinner speakers. There is an organization here, however, which is doing something to give audiences their revenge. It is the Circus Saints and Sin ners society. This unique club re verses the usual procedure by mak ing the guest of honor the "fall guy" of its monthly meetings. And it has become so popular ' that celebrities angle for a chance to en dure the two-hour program of pranks and ridicule that wins them a lifetime membership. The society began this way: " In 1931 P. Darius Benham, a news paperman, complained to friends in Sardi's about the boredom of ban quets at which the honored guest was always feted and Inflated. "A club where we kidded him would be more fun," he said. "We could deflate a guy and make him like it. The bigger a guy he is the better he'd like it." Thin Skinned His friends thought most celebri ties too thin-skinned to go for the treatment, but agreed to a club if he could find a "fall guy." Leaving the restaurant, Benham bumped into Count Felix von Luck ner, famous lecturer and daring German sea raider of the First World War. Von Luckner readily agreed to be first guinea pig. The society was organized with 17 circus fans as members pledged to raise funds to befriend impov erished old circus troupers. "For four years we had tough go ing, and then the thing caught on," Benham said. Now the club Is re stricted to 650 members prominent businessmen, artists, actors, writers and others and has a long waiting list. Among those initiated have been nine cabinet members, 15 congress men and senators, several gover nors, and sports figures such as Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey. The club's president, former Gov. Harold O. Hoffman of New Jersey, sets the tempo of the meeting by setting off firecrackers and banging away with a blank pistol instead of a gavel. After undergoing a long ribbing in a series of scathing stage skits that parody his career, the speaker is given a chance to reply but is warned : Know Better "You ought to know better now than to try to give this crowd your usual malarkey, but if you don't". The warning Is enough to restrain any sleep-Inducing oratorical flights. One of the most laughable skits was presented at the Initiation of Oen. Dwlght Elsenhower. The spec tral figure of Oen. U. 8. Grant ap peared and announced he had come to give Elsenhower "Just one word of advice." The word was: "Don'tl" Hoffman said the society had raised "thousands of dollars and helped hundreds of old circus troup ers who have no one else to turn to." Recently Jesse Jones, former secretary of commerce, gave $1000 to the fund. On occasion the "fall guy" has turned the tables. Comedian Joe Cook did it by announcing he was going to read "Anthony Adverse." Nobody left at first waiting tor Cook to give with the laughs. But after he had read on dead-pan tor two hours, they got the idea. The only celebrity who ever lost his temper was the late Hugh S. Johnson, former NRA administra tor. "He was wearing a new white summer suit." laughed Hoffman. "And somebody handed him a live goose painted blue to resemble the NRA eagle. Unfortunately, the paint hadn't dried." SALEM. Jan. 5 OPi Marlon coun ty bridge construction crews raced the stork today In building a new bridge across the Little North Fork of the Santiam river. 37 miles southeast of Salem. Three expectant mothers are among the scores of loggers and ranchers who were marooned last Tuesday when the old wooden bridge on the Elkhorn road col lapsed under the weight of a log ging truck. County engineering officials said they hope to have the new bridge In place by Tuesday night. It is a Bailey bridge, a steel prefabricated structure which gained fame in World War II. The bridge was loaned to the county by the state highway commission, which keeps 't on hand for such emergencies. It was hauled in trucks to the moun tainous site. The crews worked all day Sun day. Supplies were carried to some families in a rubber boat. The stranded families' only other route to civilization is by way of a dirt road which Is almost impas sable this time of year. No preg nant woman could use It. The three women are expecting their babies in a few days. The road goes north Into the mountains from Mehania. which is on the North Santiam highway. Ex tensive logging operations now are under w-ay along the ruute. Turn those no-longer-used articles Into cash nowl Herald and News Want Ads ure Inexpensive and bring quick results. 1 OWN PRESENTS "MESSIAH" Lindsborg, Kansas, Is famous all over the United Slates for Its Easter festival and singing of "The Mes siah." Each yenr the townspeople present Handel's "Messiah." with great artists Imported for solo parts. J. L. DEAN Public Accountant and Auditor New Office Location 306 North 7lh Nt. Phone 9346 DISTRIBUTOR FRACTIONAL HORSEPOWER GENERAL ELECTRIC MOTORS V4-V3-V2-V4H.P. AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY KLAMATH MACHINE ii Locomotive Works Sprinq & Elm Mill Supply Dept. Phono S141 NOT ONLY RELIEVES BUT 'LOOSENS UP' 8WM51IS (CAUSED BY. COLDS) rmnrsMN has been prescribed by thousands of Doctors. Ii not only relieves such coughing but also 'loosens up phlegm' and makes It easier to raise. pniTUssiK'ai Is safe and mighty effective for both old and young. Pleasant tasting tool "DCDTIICCIIK. Inexpensive. 'rCnlUOOIIV Marvin C. Davis, M.D. PHYSICIAN ond SURGEON onnounces the opening of his office ot 203 Underwood Bldg. Phone 7040 (Residence, 8818) U-SAN-0 GOT HIM! Quality cleaning plus Mothproofing You can be relieved of moth worries when you send your garments to us for cleaning. All garments cleaned by us are treated with the miracle U-SAN-0 insured mothproof cleaning system. Moths will not dam age your garments when they are cleaned by us; Moths won't HI'MII li.l mm touch U-SAN-O treated cloth ing. This new process protects your garments against moth damage for six months.;; guaranteed by an insurance policy in a nationally known company. ..at no extra cost to you. Why take chances with moths? Send us your cleaning today! Superior - Troy LAUNDRY ... DRY CLEANERS 700 South 6th PHONE 5119 336 Klamath Avenue PHONE 7513 mMii CONGRATULATIONS... To the far-sighted, sports-minded Klamath men who are sponsoring the movement of Klamath Falls into organ ized baseball. Here's hoping their efforts are rewarded . . . and that a Klamath team takes the field this spring. It is a definite step toward a greater Klamath Basin 700 Main Street Phone 3151