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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1948)
TUESDAY, FEB. 24, 194S PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON WHY WE SAY i ! Matinee 1:30 p. m. live. 8:45-11:00 p. m. uruu rhnnf 45B7 feiBOGART l(JtRll-Mim fMONi 4S72 STARTS TODAY Eve. Shows 6:45-8:30 p.m. PLUS GLENN FORD WILLIAM HOLDEN IN li STARRING JEAN ARTHUR WILLIAM " HOLDEN Keturni Home Mrs. Dorothy Ramsey, girls' physical education Instructor it Fremont school, re turned home Sunday night from Portland where she spent the past week-end attending the dance sym posium at Reed college. Mrs. Ram sey attended performances given by dance groups at the college and re ported a very inspiring and Instruc tive period. High water prevented Miss Ramsey from returning by car and she left Portland by plane late Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Ramsey also includes In her teaching duties at Fremont, dancing classes for both boys and girls. From South Enjoying a visit of several days with relatives and ! friends are Mrs. William Young and small daughter, Judy. The two flew here last week from their home I in Atlanta, Oa. Mrs. Young is the I former Carmen Stockstlll, and is at 1 the home of her parents. Mr. and i Mrs. Curtis A. Stockstlll of 4364 ; Summers lane. In three weeks, Mr. j and Mrs. Curtis A. Stockstlll will accompany Mrs. Young and Judy to j Atlanta for a brief combined busl : ness and vacation trip. Expected Home Mr. and Mrs. Wesley McNee Jr., married on Feb ruary 14 at the First Christian church, are expected home Thursday from a wedding trip which took them Into Old Mexico and through Southern California. They will be at home at the Marion apartments, Mrs. McNee is the former Phyllis Hutchlns, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Howard Hutchins of this city. Class Postponed The women's physical education class, sponsored ty the city recreation department. ; will be postponed from Wednesday night to Thursday night for this i week only. A regular physical edu cation class will be held in the girls' gym at Klamath Union high school, with the dancing class post poned until next Wednesday. ' In Susanville Mrs. Clara Shaw, who left in January for a stay in the Hawaiian Islands, is remaining for 10 days at Susanville. Calif, with her granddaughter and family. Dr. and Mrs. Allan Priest and children. She is expected home March 1. Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Adams and Mr. and Mrs. Dale West and daughter Sara returned yesterday by plane from their trip to the Islands, having spent the week-end in San Francisco. Court Of Honor Cub packs and Boy Scouts will meet for court of honor, potluck supper and a pro gram of entertainment at the Fair haven school gymnasium Friday at 6:30 p. m. Scoutmaster Maynard Faugh will be In charge of the pro gram which will include Scouting movies and colored slides. Families and friends of Scouts are invited to attend. ? wSm Phone 3263 r Continuous Daily from 1:30 V Swimming Oirl Scouts and I TC(U S-i.l. mUf WutnM. aay evening at uie xvuno poox iui a swimming program at the hours previously arranged. Girls coming for the first time should be ready to enter the pool at 7:30 p. m. All girls should bring a paper sack for cloth ing, a towel and a swim suit. Return ing Wednesday Mrs. Prentice Yeomans, daughter of Mrs. Rose M. Poole of 400 Conger, is ex pected here tomorrow morning by train after a stay in the Hawaiian Islands since last August. Mrs. Yeo mans arrived last Saturday on the Matsonia from Honolulu and spent the week-end in San Francisco. Laugh with HOMER CALLAHAN DICK MORGAN-KHERB ADAM!? I juiiaii'Viajih. otdtim3uirlit!V . Plus on the Screen MSI PENNf SINGLETON ARTHUR LAKE LARRY SIMMS E3HL13i ENDS PHONE 8484 TARAV EVE shows tVUHt 6:45-9:00 p. m. NEW SHOW TOMORROW I Plus 2nd Laugh Feature f id AtoAtD fat fax. Zrfffn Go North Mrs. Nona Briggs ac companied her sister, Mrs. Charles Whlttemore of Sitka, Alaska, to Seattle where Mrs. Whitte more and her two sons, Ricky and Kermit, will leave for their home. Mrs. Whltte more and the boys have been here the past six months visiting her father, P. D. Reeder. Condition Fair Some improve ment has been noted the past sev eral days In the condition of Eugene Lahr, Chlloquin resident, who Is a patient at Klamath Valley hospital where he had a bullet removed from his brain 10 days ago. Major Surgery Douglas Meyers, 16-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Meyers, 1411 Main, had major surgery on his knee this morning at Hillside hospital. Meyers is a butcher at the Pine Street market. Patient Mrs. Karl Gentry, well known Tulelake matron who was admitted to Hillside hospital Febru ary 19 for medical care, is reported improving. Tonsilectotny Maxlne Prentice, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Max Pren tice of route 3, had her tonsils re moved Tuesday morning at Hillside hospital. Aid Meeting Z 1 0 n Lutheran Ladles Aid will meet Thursday at 2 p. m. at the church with Mrs. Otto Stueben and Mrs. Victor Schulze as hostesses. Medical Care George Erickson of Long Bell Lumber company at Tennant, Calif. Is receiving medical care at Hillside hospital. Seriously 111 Lowell Wilson, 621 Commercial, employed by George Wood of The Kanteen, is reported seriously ill at Hillside hospital. Lamb 111 W. Ray Lamb, head of the Coca-Cola Bottling company here, is 111 at his home on Huron street. Founders Day Members and visitors at Shasta PTA will observe Founders Day, Wednesday, at 2 p. m. at the school. From School Yvctte Sweet, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William 8. Sweet of 1430 Wllford, is ex pected home for a brief visit this week-end. Yvette is a first year student at the University of Oregon at Eugene. Lenten Services Mid-week Lent en services at the Zlon Lutheran church, Wlb High, will be held Wednesday e v e n I n g. "Jesus on Trial" will be the topic of a ser mon by Rev. Victor ScluiUe. pastor. A cordial invitation Is extended to all. Rummage Sale The women's traveling bowling team will sponsor a rummage sale all day Saturday from 8 to 5 a. m. at 116 S. 6th, rear of First Federal Savings and Loan association. Anyone having rum mage may leave articles with Mary Bothwell of First Federal. Pair Facing Kidnap Charge EPHRATA, Wash., Feb. 24 I.4V Joann Phillips, 11, reported kid napped from the Moses Lake school grounds February 4, is with her father in Texas while officials study conflicting decisions of Texas and Oregon courts. Prosecutor James F. Wlckwire said Monday. Wickwire said Haines L. Phillips, Longview, Texas, wrote that his daughter was with him. The girl's mother is Mrs. John Reynolds of Moses Lake. The parents were di vorced in Oregon in 1941. Second degree kidnapping charges were filed against Mr. and Mrs. Joe Seeds, Klamath Falls. Ore. The Seeds are free under $1500 bond each. Date for their trial has not been seu "As the matter stands." Wickwire said, "the father, has custody of the child under a Texas court order, and the mother has custody under an order of the supreme court of Ore gon." Mr. and Mrs. Seeds, who reside at 506 Owens street, said today they visited recently with the child in Moses Lake. Mrs. Seeds told The Herald and News that, "it Is merely a custody case and will be settled satisfactorily between the two fam ilies." Haines Phillips, Mrs. Seeds' brother-in-law, is well known here having been employed for many years by The California Oregon Power company. He is now with an oil concern in Longview, Tex. Play Ticket Deadline Set Only a short time remains to get tickets for the 20-30 club's Drama Festival plays. The three plays, the first to be given this Wednesday, were arranged by the 20-30 club through the Civic Drama Guild of New York. All three feature pro fessional casts and direction. The plays are on our throughout the c untry. Tickets will be sold only through Wednesday for the entire series of three dramas. Tickets may be ob tained at a 20-30 booth set up in the J. C. Penney store, or requests for reservations may be mailed to Bob Henderschott, 4307 Clinton. First play, the one scheduled for Wednesday night, is "Dream Girl," which closed last year after a suc cessful two-year run on Broadway. Of interest to Oregon people is the leading feminine role of Georgina Allen, played by Terry Clemes, an Oregon girl and a former Willamette university co-ed. The name of America" grenlcal water fall i a rral American word, ll is sup posed to be a combination of two In dian wordi which mean '"hark to the thunder,' walcm.'' or limply "thunder of " TM-woiin imm iiuiv. i Soil Expert Arrives Here Soil Scientist William Baduriua arrived today from Bend to take charge of Klamath, Lakevlew and Redmond soil conservation areas. Baduriua replaces Frank Pavelek who resigned to take a position with the U. S. reclamation bureau land use department. Badurlna has been with the soil conservation service for the past 10 years, working in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, North and South Carolina, Tennessee and Arkaruos before coming to the Northwest. He worked in Madras on the Deschutes project In 1941, entered the U. S. army in 1943, was discharged in 1946 and worked ill Heppner before going to Bend. A BINOCULAR IS A LIFETIME BUY ZEPHYR-UGHT WORLD'S FINEST BINOCULAR Bovtch t tomb ta out front, wherever fir binoculars or uted . . . precltlon-qround optic. tooted wllh exclusive "BolCote" for maximum Mght trammlitlon, weather-proof, tllmare-proof, engineered wilh precision and fuHy guaranteed. 61f ' UtrrW,M ' 7wlI lit I.pkrXnllM M WJ f.r 4I 4n, I0 MM 7rf lit w.l ! r- JU fwl V 4 MM 8- A I Ifr-wM ' -tm X J V p.. tt 4WK, HO MB SJ 6x30 P.r HO i Wmi Oh....!. ' tmi 111 few. l k Portland Planes Off For Mexico NOGALES. Arts., Feb. 34 (V After being delayed by high winds on a mass flight from Portland, Ore., 11 private planes took off to- dny for Hermoslllo, capital of the Mexican state of Sonora. , Twenty-one other planes stopped ' overnight at Yuma, Arts., and were expected here today. j Forty-three passengers were In . the planes which left here for Her moslllo. A fiesta awaits the Portland busi nessmen and their families In Hermoslllo. AS LITTLE AS $1.50 A WEEK! NO INTEREST NO IXTRAS NO CARRYING CHARGES 715 MAIN STREET IN KLAMATH FALLS C Of C Slates House Report Chamber of commerce directors tomorrow will hear a report of the chamber's housing committee on the use of Drpffnn Vncnhnnnl nrhrtnl Manager Charles Stark said today. Transfer of the Mountain View "boxcar" federal apartments to OVS is under way following a controversy over the management of federal housing here and recently the San Francisco regional housing office promised a probe Into the local administration of government hous ing. Tlie chamber housing committee will recommend that present ten ants of the Mountain View project not be disturbed by the delivery of the project to OVS. Also coming up before chamber directors tomorrow is a report of a recent highway Interim committee meeting in Medford and a report on chamber activities in connection I with the OVS open house and "In- i troduction Day planned for March 5. Kennedy Funeral Rites Thursday Funeral services for the late Prince Murtis Kennedy, long-time Weyerhaeuser Timber company em ploye who died here Sunday evening at the age of 63 years, will be held from Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Officers of the Klamath Falls IOOF lodge will have charge of the services and interment will take place in the IOOF cemetery. It is now possible to keep a port ice-free by a new method of laying long lines of perforated pipes under the channel and pumping air through them. SPECIALIZED WASHING MACHINE SERVICE Four trained serrice men at your call. Largest stock of parts for all makes between Portland and San Francisco. WE SERVICE ALL MAKES MERIT'S 609 South 6th Phone 6989 In Hospital Harry Wetzel, 524 Fulton, is receiving medical care at Hillside hospital. In Hillside Mrs. J. M. Basser of Tulelake had major surgery Tuesday morning at Hillside hospital. 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