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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1948)
"PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON MONDAY, MARCH 22, 148 RAINBOW THEATRE NIva. Sbawa a:lt:00 a. m. Randolph trait In O "Gunfightcri" WAnS Jaat Htr In Rawa" NOW mm fo Th Academy Award Winners PELICAN TOWER Phone 457t 848 Eve. Show. klAU 6:45-9:00 p. m. IlUTT Weatherman Sees Big Crop Year WASHINGTON, March M A1 The weatherman holds one key to how well you'll eat In the year abend, (arming experts say. An agrlcultur department survey made public yesterday shows farm ers are ready to produce big crops If they get good weather. Spring has been slow arriving In most sections of the country. Se vere winter weather last week left a large part of the United States under a blanket of snow. It will teke time for fields to dry. The de partment said spring day planting already Is delayed In the south. Last year's spring floods and a svmmer drought cut farm produc tion, particularly of livestock feed. That's the main reason for declin ing meat supplies. This year farmers are Intent on refilling empty feed bins the first step toward putting more meat on the nation's bibles. They plan to plant feed grains on three per cent more land than last year, the sur vey showed. The indicated corn acreage is about equal to last year's small acreage. But it Is offset by larger acreages of catc and barley grains uhlch will supply feed in the fall before corn is teady. The department said a 3 000 ,000.-OOU-bushel corn crop is possible. This would top last year's small one ov 600.000.000 bushels. The acreage of food grains wheat, rye and rice is expected to be a little larger than last year. In creases were Indicated also for flax seed, potatoes, and sorghums. Small er plantings are tr sight for soy beans, rice, dry beans and peas, to brfcco, peanuts and sugar beets. FUNNY BUSINESS Je '.1v, V- .. a . I . ' -1 IV-I MT"I - r I -J ccn. lata it nik invtq. WTmwnnTwi "Henry it determined to beat hit neighbor with the firtt crop of tomatoes!" Blv -.rr.HSTri iiCCVCPS hi ClUS !1 W1ECEK CAS! ENDS Continuous TODAY Dally from 1:3 p. Daisy Kenyon CHARLES STARRITT 'is ALL NEW SHOW TOMORROW : Jt'WW-zl SET W4 d mm I Beautiful Rhonda FLEMING Exciting Rory Calhoun In 'ADVENTURE ISLAND' Filmed In Tropical Color! ) ri.UH ) ronipunlon Feature 0ENI KSUra ni Ml orcli. I 1Ltt.U.. Smart ! t I TiATlTlfir. I k J'V ririDOM . tkv. Twenty-five Boy Scouts attended the Scout circus in Lakeview March ! 12 The Bly troop erected a 20-foot high pole tower for their stunt. ! The following advancements were i presented to Scouts by Ernie Fetscii j at the court of honor-following the c'rcus: Robert Wlnfleld. life Scout b.-dge: Darrel Wlnningham. star I Scout badge: Harold Winfield. David Clemens. Alfred LaCasse and . Fred West, first class badges, and ; Warren Wlnningham, second class i badge. The following merit badges were also given: David Stockner. public health and safety; Robert Wlnfleld. athletics, safety and public health: Harold Winfield. cooking: Fred West, home repairs, cooking and wood carving; Lloyd Morehead. j physical development, camping and I hiking. I Also attending the circus were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winfield. Mr and Mrs. Lee Winnlngham and Mr. and Mrs. Arcnie West of Weyer haeuser camp t. Mr. and Mrs. Walt LCasse. Mr. and Mrs. Vere Pat terson and Mrs. Smith from Ivory Pine. Mr. and Mrs. Spike Arm strong. Less Cummings. Joe Kendall and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dishno of Bly. The annual meeting of the Horse fly Cattle association was held at the ranger station March 11. At tending the meeting were Dave Campbell. Walt Campbell, James Watts and Spike Armstrong, of Bly: I Henry Gerber. Robert Hunt and I Pr Warren Hunt of Klamath Falls; ! Will Campbell. Lloyd Gift and Mr. i Caldwell of Bonanza and John I Kucera of Lakeview. Officers were : elected for 1948 as follows: presi ! dent, Dave Campbell: vice presi j dent. Lloyd Gift: secretary and j treasurer. Henry Gerber: advisory board, Robert Hunt and Clarence Dallas. Henry Gerber was aLo I elected to the forest, advisory board. Various matters regarding graz lnr were discussed. ' Herb Hadley, Bly ranger district assistant, is at Wind River. Wash., this week attending the forest serv ice training school. Bill Maxwell, who has been work ing .on a ranch at Amity this win ter has returned here and will be working In the Bly district again this season. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tschirky were business visitors here Tuesday. The Bly Scouts are making plans for a community kite contest to take place April 24. It will be open to all children In Bly and vicinity. Two new Scouts have Joined the troop the past week. The new mem bfrs are Alfred Chitwood and Billy Nixon. Word has been received that Mr. and Mrs. John Geijsbeck of Com ing. Calif., are parents of a baby bov born March 1 at Red Bluff. I Calif. He weighed five pounds and I has been named Frederick Keith. 1 The Oiejsbccks made their home ! here for several years. They also j Phve a little girl, three years old. I Mrs. Wilbur Book is spending some time at Corcoran. Calif. 8he was called there bv the serious 111 ! ness of her mother. Mrs. Lucv : Stowe. Book has received word : that Mrs. Stowe Is much improved, j aiid Mrs. Book plans to return home soon. Mrs. Dave Campbell. Mrs. Walt I Cemnbell and Mrs. Max Cllne went j to Grants Pass March 12 where I they visited Mrs. Walt Campbell's daughter. Mrs. Paul Hess, and fam i'l. Mrs. Campbell remained in the ! valley planning to return home late I this week. Mrs. Dave Campbell ar.H Mm rMin au) vtsllaH Mr anri I Mr ftennr Herb at Acrilanrl Sam Hadley of Paisley Is visit ing here this month at the home o! his ton, Herb Hadley, and fam ily. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Harrison were business visitors In Klamath Falls Wednesday. Mrs. Pauline Wessel has bought the Whitcv Arrell home. Mr. anj Mrs. Arrell left Sunday for Tulclaki to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Russ Smith of Med ford are parents of a boy born March 4 at Medford. This Is the Smith's first child and has been lmmed Patrick Russell. Mrs. Smith Is the former Eileen Schneider. Pioneer Community Callers in our midst this week ' were Airs. Horace Ueu and Mrs. i Phyllis Poole. Mr. and Mrs. Fred' Coler, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Buillong, ' all ol Klamath Falls. Mrs. Joseph King and Mr. Camp bell of Willows. Calif., who are cattle 1 owners in that area, were visitors at the W. L. Frain ranch this week. I While here they were looking for pasture for their cuttle herds. Visitors at the R. E. Hurlbut home ' this w eek are Mrs. Laura Malcolm, i sister of Mrs. Hurlbut, of Vallejo, Calif., Louis Johnson of Richfield. I Ida., uncle of the women, and also visiting were ti e Ted Johnsons lrom Dorria and Mrs. Robert Baker. Fitzgerald brothers moved their cattle to their summer range in the Pokegama area. Mr. and Mrs.' W. L. Frain and Mr. and Mrs. D. Clemmens went to Ashland Sunday to attend a birth day dinner at Fred Fratn's honor ing his birthday and also the anni versary of Vera Clemmens and Ron ald Boat. Word has been received here of the arrival of a new son born to the Halleck Donelsons at Mr.Mmnville. This Is their third son and the child is a great-grandson of the W. L. Frains. Three Jailed On Drunk Charges The county jail received three new visitors over the week-end, all brought in by state police. Sampson Rex . Carter. 43. w as booked for drunk driving Saturday night and posted $150 ball, and his companion. Tom Harold Quinn. r". of 418 N. 11th. posted $15 bail on a charge of being drunk in a public place. They were arrested on S. 6th. Arthur S. Gerard. 39. of Pelican City, was jailed Saturday night on a drunk charge and had not posted bail today. How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulslon relieves promptly be iause it goes right to the seat of the rouble to help loosen and expel term laden phlegm, and aid nature o soothe and heal raw, tender, In lamed bronchial mucous mem ranea. Tell your drugBist to sell you , bottle of Creomulslon with the un exstanding you must like the way it uickly allays the cough or you are o have your money back, CREOMULSION or Cough J, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Snow Storm Hits Crater Lake' Area A heavy snow storm was whipping through Crater Lake national park today and more than eight inches of fresh snow fell between 4 a. ni. and 10 a. m., rangers reported this morn ing. Travel was exceptionally light Into the park Sunday and there were no ski or traffic accidents. Temperature Sunday was 34 at the maximum reading. 35 last night and 30 at mid morning today. Roads are open throughout the park area but chains Snow Survey Goes Ahead MFDFOKU. March 23 (in The Kin minimi's newly meclinnlred snow measurers were chugging along on ti'hrdule Saturday after braving a heavy snowstorm on thrlr flist day In the mountains. The seven men who departed from Ashland yesterday to measure snow levcL-i elong the Ciisctules di vide reported by short wave radio that they completed the 30-mlle trek to Fish lake safety. The group, traveling by sno-rat. eMiects to cover the 614 miles to Mount Hood by April I. completing vork which In the paxl has taken uteks to do. The snow measure ments are used for forecasting Irri tation water aupHy. The surveyors radioed that lliev were going through Lake o' the Woods to the east side of the iiuuiu tr.lns today, and would camp to night at Cold sprlngN near Pelican Butte lookout station In Klamath county. Sunday they will incasur" the snow course at Crater lake. Homelife Blamed For Ulcers I.OH ANtlKIKH. March 33 (in! Men, are you bo'lieird with prpllv llli'crsr Maybe the Utile woman U to bi.ime. suys Dr. Earl K. I'onudoh. of Laiwer. Mich.. pri'Mdrnl n( the American College of Osteopathic In- : tl'I'hIM. "More troll have peptic ulcers," i I)r Congdon declared In an Inler- j view, "ticottiiKe ihey can't get along With llielr wives." Along wllh matrimonial dlM'ord, ' h placed "worries and frustrations" j a major ulcer producers. , The tusks of I he. bablrusn grow grows through the animals fare, thiougliout Ha life. The upper pair I like lien n. CAN YOU RltllVI NASAl CONOtlTIONf Attmtrr: IVs, mi ni'i ut I'luVy rhnk til Jiml 2 tlnni ot 1'KiiKtni Ntio l)niM in parlt ntiitti-il reduce luiiull itinittwl ion, h'ii tip mid cIui(iph1 HUM. Yttu ((Hi) v. li'-r, tin'olta miniit null! nwtiv. Muv PENETRQ oSop Early Opening Of Meat Plants Seen ALBERT LEA, Minn.. March 33 iVi Senator Ball iK-Mluu.i fore casts the reopening of the nutlou's meat packing plant not later than a week from Monday. Addressing 800 at the unnulil Swine Institute here last night. Ball snld if the president's fact finding board failed to settle the strike issues, the government would seek an injunction under the Taft Hartley law. are necessary for cross-park travel as well as from Annie Spring to the rim. WHY WE SAY - 5NOB a n 31? This word is thought to have bern coined by Thackeray nho uwd it to d acribe George IV. He is believed to have lormed it from the entry against the name of "commoner" in the litii of college. It wan written s.nob" which originated from Latin worda meaning "not of noble birth." Connie's Beauty Shop at Merrill Under New Management of LENA HARRISON All Types of Beauty Work Available Come in or call Merrill 16 for appointment Turn those no-longer-used articles Into cash now I Herald and News Want Ads are inexpensive and bring quick results. V, S EEEBTAR1C 1 SHOP Ik life, eaul'jl''1' MISS NETZ of The HERE FARM SHOP, will be here March 24 She is Herb Farm'j special consultant a Vz at smoothing out puzzling beauty questions! She'll tell you how and why the special, age-old English formulae used in I Herb Form preparations will help solve your beauty problems. You'll be delighted with her Iriendly advice and you'll en-' joy her demonstration of Herb farm'j enchanting line of unusual toiletries ond Jr. ftf Cosmetics. Do plan to ttyne Stab iu(f, cm 5th and Main Now is the Time To Order DOORS SCREENS ALL CABINET WORK TO ORDER INTERIOR FINISHING All Workmamhln (iuarsnlrrd BECK'S CABINET SHOP 155 Frlrda St. Hi. I97S From Wheel Chair to Braces I WI.S. i i w i i r . 1 It lakes the skill of siwciolists to help this happy lxy get his teol on the ground ready to go places. You start him on his way when you buy Easter Seals. This is only one of the services for crippled children made possible through Easier ScuJs. Shaw Stationery Co. 729 Main Phone S602 L.... Wfiy are more people achieving MORE SEeyUDTlY through 87ABLE POIOCDGS than ever before ? SKCL'KiTY for our families and for ourselves is a final all of us are striv ing to attain. If these were normal times? this one fact misilit fully aci-miul for the record volume of iiqiiitablc lic insurance purchased tail year. Hut the conditions under which we now live provide additional rcatnnt why so many think ing Americans arc inventing more of their dollars in life insurance. Think fur a moment in terms of yourself: You arc living in a period of inflation of high prices and high taxes. .Never has the purchasing power of your dollar been lc for most of the thing you buy. What would hap pen if you put more of your spendable dollars in life insurance? With your very first premium you receive ImmtJialt protection a guarantee of security that can't he obtained in any other way. It vouU lakf ytari of irlf-Jtmial and tavinf re ac cumulate the amount of lerurity that it prwidei at once throuth a life inturance policy. Moreover, the benefits which you or your family will receive from your policy will come, in all likelihood, at a time w hen the dollar has regained a mure normal purchasing power. In this respect, life insurance paid for today is bargain protection for the future. EQUITABLE FAMILY GROWS The Kquitulile Life Assurance Society of the United States a non-profit institution oper ated solely in the interests of ill policyholders and their beneficiaries has been helping fami lies huild security since IH59. ,1ore people purchased more protection through Equitable policies last year than ever before. New insurance issued amounted to $1,170,000,1100. A total of $1 1,94,000,1)00 of insurance in force now safeguards the liqtiitahlc family of policyholders. In line with this increase in protection, the resources of The liquitulilc Society increased $322,400,000 to $4,505,0(10,000, a new high. Benefit payments last year from policies that were called upon In fulfill the purposes for which they were purchased, amounted to $2H0,AK5.II00. FIGHTING INFLATION Money incti to purrhac life inuiranrc i notv nflntintiary, tinre premium payments repr lent fundi diverted from conmmptinn into channels of investment, where thry help to incrente the nation'i industrial productivity In flat ion h the tmtmi everiont. The primary source of inAation in thii country it the eiccie supply of money and credit in our commercial hanking system, reflecting unsound national monetary policiei. If we are to solve the inflation problem, w must first of all deal with this excessive supply of money in our hanking system. It is useless to try to control prices through rationing, or through increased production when the creation of money in the form of bank credit goes on uncontrolled. It h like fithtiHft firt with one hand while hi tthtr hand pour on additional fuel. Inflation can he restrained at its primary ourcc if enough citiens, motivated by self interest and recognition of the need for pre nerving the economic strength of the nation, make their demund for sound monetary policies known to those who represent them in ( Congress. THOMAS . 1'AKMNSON, fr-sidest SEND FOR THIS FREE BROCHURE! 1 I" Tliii il The Ivuuiuhle Sm-irir't annual rrport lor IV47. If you ara interfiled in rcrciviiiK a copr, ail drrtt yiiur request in Ilia local uI1h- hflnw, or in .1!U Seventh Atanut, New York I, New York. AdJ.,,,: A copy of ffih rapwt H Win awMaa' M awk fajirrMWe polltyholdf. THE KOl'ITABI.R MI'K ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED STATES A Mmlmml CwmfiJ ImttfrKlfl mmjff Ikl Uw f Sim )'rt SMI IUmi. I, r,hm, fiiudiml I)i:ci;miii;ii .11, 1947 Assets Ca.h I lionila (InrliidlnS IA,VM,17 on denoalt wllh pulillc aothnritlra) United Ntutes oiiwnmeni Honda Other Honda Preferred and Oiiarnnteed , Ntocks Common Stocks Mnrtaaae l.ouna Real Kaiale Lnatnon Society'! Pnllclea Premluma Kecelvalile Intereal and Renliila Due and Accrued and Other Aaaela Total Admitted Anuria. . , . IJ7,5fcl,755 i,;e.,7.i' J.270,1 14,161 n,mM 3,0J,9IJ .16,77,7R 64,69H,M5 H7,.V.0,7Hft .i,4n,l.M J7.4IO.ISI 4, SOI, 171, 75.1 Reserves, Other Liabilities and Surplus Rrarrvea for Policy and Contract .M.IIH.Ml,? . 74,aM.7l . 7,4TS,e . 1, 5.1.1, am .n,nsitn .I4,M5,,II77 l.lahlllllra.. Premium! Paid In Advanr Reserve for Taira ,,, Mlsreltiineoua t.liihllltlea Provlalnn for I US IHvlilemla ln PiillcylinliliTa . , .,,,,, Tntnl Iteaervaa and Otliar l.liihlllllea Surpliia Funitai (VintlnilPiiry Reaerva for Croup Life loaiirani-e 7,l2e,AH tlnaaaltnril Fundi (Sutpliia).. 7.1I.745.S7S lotal Rearrvea 14, 504,971, 75i la accofdtnrt with iht rfqiiiifmvnl nf til IhiikIi itilHrvl la amnnif uton ai limit ! Ihvll imnfllrait vili, tnH ill mhaf h lac u art viluvd II Iht mailt! iiiniaiiimi liiinilitd hp iht NilHinal AniHlanon nl Initiianit (.'ntnm Klamath Falls Hcadquartori HAROLD P. DRAKE, Agency Manager JOHN H. HOUSTON, Field Aiilstonf 114 Nnrlh 7lll Street