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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1948)
IATURDAY, MARCH 20, 1948 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON PACE THRU WEATHER KI.AMATII rAU. AND Vlt'lNITY! Illciim.ln (liuillliM tiMlllflll. HiiiiiImv rlouily with iH'i-italiMiiil ruin, utmniiliis; In how. IIIHh Imlm illl. tAtvt tulllMllt 'U. iinh Humur m , NOHIUCHN (.-Al.irnllNlAi Klr ti tlsv, timlHlit sml HiiihUv, lint Iih-isi'-Ii'II i-IhiiiIIii-.s ssli-ms imilli-ril millii Nun iImv. L'uhl lnnlslit Willi ii"t Inlmlur vnlUys. W I Mumliiy. AI.mIsisI to fin.lt niirlliw-.t Wind ill I'hii.I. Wr.NTK.IIN lllir.llllN: Mcullv rlullily with srMlt-rtil iIiiiwik ImiUv. ilfi'ilii lv vsiiln. Haiti r slMiw-rs as-Ill Hmi Uy. Nol mill It rhaliu III liMiuier-llli-. Illtftt tmlll ils 4; In S.V l.nw li.nmlil ;ki In MihIdinIv Id itrslmmllv llssll vve.l In itm .Iimi.i wlml vll nl. r.AH'ir.HN OIIMidN. I'-ltly rlmlilv Willi l-w snim Unifies In niniinlilnB Intlny- Inrrprt.lns tlu(illM ImiiimIiI. rimnly Willi shuw-rs nf mm nr sni.w Hnnilsy. Mlglillv warmer ('liiy IIIMlt ImiIIi Uays 4.1 In H-1. Uiw ImilMliI 21 tu :u. Kllllata JllllirM Kltwiinl IllltlrclKB. m.n u( Wlllliiin T. KiiiIimIud (it 41011 AUniiiiuil ilrlvc, lins tiillslril III tlio UullPtl Hliilm imvy lur thrco-yriir rrulnr. Jullirs in procmwil lit llir Ich iiI imvy i rerun Inn stallim. mill u sworn In nt 1'iiriliiiul. Hhurily aflcr ellllsllnil Jlimrs (lriilllnl lur linn Lilt-no. whrrn hr will iinilrruii U wrrku il buslc Irnlnliill Iwfiirc lirlim Miliiiirl lo une ol the ships u( Hid llrrt. I)rrrc Of llniior Tlli'lr will lie S rrmilnr inrpiinit of Uin Omrcc uf lliiiiur In till- KO hull Monday, nl a p. ni., twlh(ir Willi Inltlnllon miri iiifiiiiirlnl arrvlre lor Alfrrda HlrilililrU. Plana will lie complrlrtl lor lli card piirly Ui u lirlil In I ho KC Imll Wednesday dvruliiK, March 31. Korinals will bti worn tor the meeting. Ilrtuniliif From Kweiie Mr. mid Mm. Austin lluyden mid Mr. and Mrs. Wllliiin llaydrn are rxprclrd home Hiinduy from tuiirnr where they limit been attending the state liiuikolbiill toiirimiiiriu. Mm. Wlllliiin Hayden tins brrn on a wrrk'ii vaca llon tram lirr position ill The Herald mid News. Purchase llmne Mr. nnd Mm. Joe Daley, lormrrly of KlmnuUi rails but lor number of years living In Portland, have purchased a hniiie on Hummers lime. Mm. Dnlry la Hie dinner Cllndya Hm Iwr o( tlila city. Unlry la now with Wrt-llltcllcoclt liere. rllrlit-Wullil Uppi'lldalll, 4:i(J0 llialire, wua moved fioin liln lioine tu lllllalde lioapllnl Cililiiy by iimbii Inner. Upprndiilil la ri'riilvlnif mcill cii' tiiiip. mid hln (rondltlon wim ru pnilril fiilr tlila iiiornliiK, lliialneaa Trip Mr. mid Mra. I). II. Ilmllry. W.I Mlcliliiiin, will Iruva Hundiiy nioiiilnu for I .on Anuclca whrie lliry will aprnd aeveiiil week! on biialneiui. Treatment Ann Vldiil. WJ', K. Miiln, nil employe of the I'lit-lfio 'I'clrplionn mid Telruiupli couipiinv. In rriTlvlnif treiiliiienl al lllllalde lioapllnl. Tiiittlleeliiiny Holirrt Kent ltiow nr, 4-yrur-old win nl Mr. mid Mi. Mi win llrower of MUD C'otliiKe, hud lil tonalla rnnovrd nl lllllaldc lioa pllnl Hiiturdiiy ni'inilnii. In IIMUIde Chnrlea T. MiCnr rol. 413 8. Ill) atreet, employed nt 'I lie Town club, la reeelvlng inedlctil cure nt IlllUlile hoapltul. !leervatlfi!ii T'llime wlalllllg to attend the Yuuiik Itepubllcnn club dinner lioiiorlini Herreinry ol Ntnte Karl Newbry, are OAked to rail Mm. Hlchard Maxwell or Mra LntinMirc Mhnw lor rraervntlona. The dinner meeting la aehedulrd lor 7 p. til. at Uie Wliieniu. Fatter Favora Kree pntterna and I liulructloiiA for children'a Coaler parly gamea, lavora and drcorn tloiu mid bullrtliu for appropriate menu are available In the home drmoiutratlon office, room 200. federal building. Arrives . Jnrk I. nobinaon ar rived hrro tixlay to aeiid KnMer vacation with hla pnreiita, Mr. and Mra. C. K. ItohliiMin of HI Irhy. Jack ! a undent at Utmilurd util Teraltjt .4' Home J. Kelly Fnrrls, on of Mr. and Mra. C. W. Henry and a law aludrnt at Hie Unlvemliy of ; Oregon, arrived from Eugene on ' Thuraday evening to apend Hie print vacation. F.iamlnallon Mr. and Mra. Jim Orr of Uie Lava Beda nallonnl moniimpnl, were 111 Klnmnth Pnlla Friday (or Orr lo take a civil serv ice axamlnatlon In geology. Meeting Catholic Dnughlern of Amerlm will meet In the pnrlnh hall Mondity at 8 p. m. All Inter esting program has been ptnnned and all are urged lo attend. Tursdar Meeting Tlie Happy ! Hour club will meet with Mm. Ed ) I.awrrllce nt 3.100 Andenon on , Tuesday at 3 p. ni. Medfnrd Her Ted Medfni'd. I Rnfeway district mnnnKrr at 8a- j lem. a former Klnmnth Fulls man, la here on buslnc this week-end. i Improving Mrs. Clnrn D. Drew j has been seriously 111 at her home , but la now reported Improving. Underwater Logging To Start Soon MOUNT VKflNON. Wash.. March 10 oVi 'Hiree Inrn have launched near here what Hiey believe to be the alnte'a first underwater logging operation. Their luttglng equipment Includea a drep-sra diving suit and a wur surplus amphibious "duck." Thry ure aeillng out lo anlvuge water soaked, but Bound, loga which have rented on the bottom of Dig lake for 3b ynirs or more. Thry brougnt the flrnt log ashore thla werk. and alter tenting It with an nx John Wlrla observed: "It's as solid as the day It waa cut." Tlie partners In the unique ven ture are Mlllurd Tlngley. an ex perienced diver; Kenny Good, ex navy alilplltlcr. and Wlrla, who hrliied cut Umber around the lake when a mill was operating there a quarter century ago and log booms dotted the lake. The men estimate there Is a mil lion board fret of lumber on the lake bottom. Tlnglry suld that when he went down for a look In his diving suit "I couldn't walk 10 leet without run ning across a log. Most ol them are good logs, belter than what Is being cut around here now. "Home of the old loggers Hunk we're nuts. Hut we figure since we (lout have lo build minis or fall the trees we can make a little money by pulling out 35.000 to 30.0OO leet of timber a day." Czechs To Work Over Sunday PHAOIIE. Marrh 30 i.1'i Work ers 111 Czechoslovakia will go 10 their Jobs as usual tomorrow In stead of enjoying a Hundiiy rest. Factories and olflres will be open far a so-called "victory shift." Leaders of the new communist gov ernment said the workers will 'driiiiinstrate llielr elntlon over the victory of progressive forces" 111 the recent political crisis. The workers will get no extra pay. Part of the money earned by Ihrlr efforts will go lo the United Niillons International relief for rhlldrcn and to the communist-led Oreek partisans opposing the pres ent Greek government. Offending Poplars Removed From Little City Park jp LW-gtVrl W -TtM-T imtt, -ITU.. Pall 1iAlmm i,VA,g,vJf-: Folk pi pAMlnv by the trimuUr park at EpUndr and Kldnrado (hit week ohwrvrd workmen culljdit down frw uf the Uritrr trrm and with the cuMtdmitry lniuliilt)vrnes uf tree Invent, wanted to know "why?" City Knjchieer K. A. Thmai explained that rooU from the pop Ian. were rlojcKin up he aewrrs In that area and that there were mure trees than neceaaary In the amall park. The park board crew re moved the tree. Tipsy Bandits Stage Own Sale BOHTOfi Mnreh 20 V A llpny giinmnn offered bargiiln prices dur ing the course of a holdup ut the Onirics liquor mart lust night. While an accomplice held the owner and clrrr 111 n bnck room, Ihe tipsy one wnlted on several cus tomers practically giving the luff awny. Tiring of the Job. he called Uie owner to wait on four customers and made him lefusc payment for four 1 qunru. The pair fled with $300 after I spending hnlf an hour In the store. ' Sunrise Hervlcea Eioiter sunrise services will be sponsored by the Klamath county YMCA Trl-Y and Klgh-Y, for Uie high school youth of the county In front ol the high school from 6 15 a. m. to 7 a. m. Holiday, March 28, Further details o: the services will be announced when they are completed. '48 Agriculture Forecasts Show About Same Acreage Of Wheat To Be Planted WAHH1NOTON. March 20 (Pi The agriculture department report ed Friday farmers plan to plant Hie same acreage of corn this year as last year. The corn acreage wa forecast at 8C, 1:11.000 acres compared with 88, 6!i(,,000 last year and Bl .686.000 for the ten-year (1936-46i average. The department's goal for thU yiar Is 90,700.000 acres. A below-normal acreage contrib uted to last yeari very small corn crop. The department gave this estl mi.te of the corn acreage In a re port showing farmers' planting In tentions for major crops. The acre aces actually planted may turn out U be larger or smaller than Indi cated. The weaher. price change, the labor supply and other factors may cause farmers to make some changes before planting time. No forecasts on production were given. Wheat Down The spring wiieat acreage was forecast at 19,789.000 acres. ThU is a decrease of one-half of one per cm under last year's 19.779.000 acres. The ten-year average acre age is 18.612.000. The winter wheat acreage was pievlously estimated at 58.648.000 acres. Thla compares with S8.068.- For Kent TRUCKS - PICKUPS CARS U-Drive - Move Yourself Local or Long Distance. Save H STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 Kast Main SEWING MACHINE REPAIRING gxptrl neiranlce4 ffrk (All Makes! raaoaabla Pricet Fret Estimates Sewing Machine Service Tar Indepsii4enl Oesler Pbene C1?l stls Sbasts ffsr 000 serried for the 1947 crop and 4 ',474,000 for the ten-year average Thua the combined winter and spring wheat acreage would be 78, 437.000 The government's goal Is 75 095,000 acres. The Durum wheat acreage which l a part of the spring wheat acre ace was indicated at 3,092.000 acres planted Inst year. The ten year average is 2,701,000. The Intended acreages of other crops, the per cent change from last year's acreage and the ten year average acreage, respectively, Included: Oats Gain Oats 45.790.000 acres; 7.5 per cent over 42,501,000 last year and 42.130, OuO for the ten-year average. Barley 12.660.000.000 acres: 5 2 per nt over 12.030.000 and 14.632.000. Potatoes 2.162.0O0 acres; 0.7 per .. nllB 1 tt -e.llf " J oC... Moert tunc Me charges. I advance. citMGER 1 JIWIHGOWII I 4i Main R phone tune a : 8402 J3 ctnt over 3.147.000 and 2,897,000. Bugnr beets 92.000 acres; 8.8 per ctnt less BliOOOO and 894.000. The prospective acreage of nu J01 crops by Important stales corn p.ired with last yenr s acreage: Spring wheat other than Durum South Dakota 3,440.000 and 3, 215.000: Molilalia 3,352.000 and 3. 101.000: idnho 541.000 and 41W.000: Washington 843.000 and 870,000; Oiegon 2611.000 and 228,000. Rurtim wheat South Dnkota 188,000 and 198,000. Little Ads get Big Results. Use the Herald and News Want-Adsl ' . HE BUYS - A WOMAN Stocks Show Good Gains Today NEW YORK, Mnrcli 20 Wi Lend ing securities raced ahead a lew cents to as much as 14 a slvire 111 rapid-fire trading In tlie stock mar ket todny. Drahinrs were amiuiu llir fastest for any Saturday In Uie past year. Wall Street sourres suggested that buying wns based on the potential effects of the European aid program and a domestic rearmament policy. Extreme gains were trimmed a bit soon afler the first rush to buy wore off. Toward the close of business at noon, however, another buying mood drvcloix-d nnd Itiuil prices were near the br-it for the day. STOIt.M WANMXCiS SEATTLE. March 20 'i The weather bureau ordered storm warn ings holsied at 1 p. m. today from Tatooih island to the mouth of the Columbia rlvrr. Small craft warnings were or dered on Inland waters of Washing ton and Oregon from the mouth of the Columbia river to Newport. A slalom Is a skiing race, usually against time, down a rlg-sng course. 'VERT MANY DESIGNS fioin wliicli to cliiioc. Get our prices. Compare Tho Oregon Granite Co. II. II. Waltcrmlre r. O. llo tins. Klamath Falls. Oregon THE RAINBOW LINE OF GRANITES VVh(t tidtwafl flrti. ot flurtroHnt, (tvaitoDl at con. YOU ARE INVITED TO THE V. F. W. SATURDAY NIGHT .ft I 'Si W U Y 1M .;. . I MLSSII) ' SI ' CtJh-P CMhCti fife AfkRfi il astasisiMSMsisssatsstaaM . 1 1 j r Tin-fti i n I mm linn in ARMORY Music by Karl Smykil and Hit 16-Picce Starduitert Band Dancing 9-1 Featuring Kay Carlyle, vocalist Adm. $1.00 incl. tax PUT your mind's eye to measuring the makings of a truly masterful car nnd you certainly can't overlook this one, especially this year. 1 1 ere you find the distinction of taper thru styling the regal comfort of an nll-coil-spring ride, now newly shielded against vibration the Fire ball action of a great straight-eight engine that boasts the quietest purr and pulse in nil motordom. Already you have reason to grant that it sets a new measure of motorcar ex cellence, regardless of price.Now look nt something where comparison ends at Roadmastcr's Dynaflow Drive. For no automobile drive ever devel oped makes driving so effortless, yet gives you such near-miracle perform ance. Here you not only drive without a clutch pedal and without manual gear shifting but also without any break in your Roadmaster's gait, as it accel erates between all speeds. That is be cause no gears ever shift anywhere in tlie car not even automatically! 1 Iere the power plant itself does what gears used to do responding to the touch of your toe on the treadle through all speed ranges without trace of lag or halt or hesitation. So though you've already decided there was no surpassing the Road master's super excellence in terms of its 4400 pounds and 18 feet of top styl ing, luxury and power just boost your expectations still higher. See the Roadmaster try Dynaflow and you'll find more reason than ever to get your order in with or without a car to trade. mm) WHAT'S DIFFERENT ABOUT DYNAfLOW DRIVE? To an fficitnt new pump (Itft above), Bulck nglnotrs havo added a truo turbine (right) and art ingenious new supercharging auembly (in hand) which product a torque-booiting action in starting and accelerating. The reiult is the tint device on any American passen ger car which employs liquid to fill the function of both tho clutch and the usual low, second and high gears. Tho clutch pedal ts eliminated and simple control gives you manual selection of power ranges and direction. 0$rtml T Mfre t9$t lttmdmllr mtdilx tear. BUICK alone has a these features it DYNAFLOW DRIVE . Jilrin.., TAPER-THRU STYUNO VIBRA-SHICLDED RIDt RIGID TORQUE-TUBE it ROAD-RITE BALANCE DUOMATIC SPARK ADVANCE SAFETY-RIDE RIMS QUADRUFLEX COIL SPRINGNO FLE X-FIT OIL RINGS HI-POISED FIREBALL POWEK Tuns In HfNBY J. MYIOJ. Mutual Nslwo'fc, AWayi and 'rirfari HELP AMERICA PRODUCE FOR PEACE-TURN IN YOUR SCRAP TEN SMART MODELS IRON AND STEEL BODY BY USHER H. E. HAUGER 1330 Main '24 Years Your Buick Dealer' Phone 5151