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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1949)
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. .ORECON aXJRSDAY, AUG. 11, 1949 PACE TWO Midland Empire News Pioneer Community Mr. nd Mrs. Jo Brownll nf Klmth Fslls visited the W. U Fralns on 8undv. Mr. and Mm. Fred Frin of Ash land were here last wwK. Rod Hardman wu also hfr from Redmond where he It employed by the state highway department. New resident In our area r the Burkhrt family from Butt val ley. They hav purchased the Jamee Randall place. Mra. J. B. Crawtord came last week and shipped her tumitur to The Dallaa where they are bow making their home. Mr. J. P. Christenson and daugh ter, Elva, returned to their home at Vermeils, Calif, after spending two weeka vacation here. Rod Train t in the Klamath Val ley hospital convalesing from a heart ailment he has been suffer Ing from for aome ume. Nellie Anderson spent Monday In Klamath Falls shopping and on business. Colwell brothers are beginning their harvesting this week. The R. E. Hurlbut family return ed Sunday from a two weeks' va cation trip to the Bay area and along the coast. On their return they brought Beverly home with them. She has spent, the summer vacation with her aunt at Vallejo, Calif. Injured Man Taken To Hospital John Hanson of Reagan. N. D, wu moved from the Klamath Falls airport to Klamath Valley hospital, suffering from a shoulder Injury late Wednesday afternoon. Hanson flew her from North Dakota to undergo surgery at Klamath Valley hospital and on a atopover at the 6eatUe, Wash, air port, slipped and Injured his shoul der. He waa moved to the hospital by Kaler ambulance. US Min. from Town U fyfrgP "Back to School CAMPUS NeV Fothtong NeW V.lue. Oar Value Lead! Why Pay Mare? New A "MUST" IN EVERY WARDROBE ZIP-IN Lined COATS m95 Covert! and Gabardine Tweed and Fleece Sharkskins and Broadcloth All 1M WmI Fibrin Lined With Wool or Leather Wine. Black, Green, Grey, Tan Boxy and Wrap Style 81se I U St. Use Our Convenient . Lay-Away Plan Select now, have It put aside and you'll hav It paid for when Fall arrive. OTHER "BACK TO SCHOOL" NEEDS SWEATERS 1.99 2.99 3.99 Cardigan and slipover hi wide selection of style and color. Excellent value ... everyone! SKIRTS 2.99 3.99 4.99 Wools, tweeds, rayon taffeta and faille. Ballerina styles) klrt with kangaroo pockets. Novel trims. SLIPS Again w offer the moat foe your money In Blip. Tsllored and lar trimmed. Beautiful quality fabric. Choir of hade. 615-17 Main Sr. Mt. Laki Mr. and Mrs. Willis D. Vinson of Tacoma, Wash, who have been vis- lllng at Complon, Calif, and Mrs.! Howard L. Roberts of Oakland. Cal- I If, visited with Mr. and Mrs. R. L. : Fleming Thursday, Mrs. Vinson and Mrs. Fleming am cousins. j Leo Jsrdlrte of Hartllne. Wash,! visited friends here Thursday and Friday. , ! Deepest sySupathy la extended to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Larkey In the I death of their Infant daughter Linda Lee Friday morning. Mrs. W. K. Jeffcoat and ton Jay William returned to their home at i Likely. Calif, Friday after a visit i with relatives and friends here. Ruth Dixon of San Francisco ar rived Friday to spend part of her vacation visiting at lh home ot her brother Percy Dixon and fami ly. Miss Dixon Is with the Southern Pacific Railway office staff. Pansy Lewis of Lakevlew, Or, la the guest of Mr. and Mrs. How ard Jackson and family this week. Mr. and Mrs. James Ellis of Can by. Ore, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Thompson last week. Mrs. Ellis who was Miss Jennie Remhart. was a teacher at the Mt. , Lakl school before It was consoli-l dated with the Henley school. I Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Wilson and ! daughter Katherine of Susanvtlle, Calif, arrived Sunday for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Cray Brannon and family. Mrs. Wilson Is Mrs. Brannon's sister. Mr. and Mra. T. D. Jackson and children Eleanor and Ray returned home Saturday -om a two months motor tour of the United 8 tales. The Boy Scouts, under leadership of Don Johnson, met at the Orange hall Thursday night. Final plans were completed for the seven mem bers who were able to attend Boy Scout camp at Crescent lake Sun day. Rev. J. R. DeLap accompan ied the boys. Members going were Ralph Hayes, Henry Williams. Wil bur Harnaburger. Larry Snyder. Edwin Keady, Robert Enman and Ray Robinson. FISH COUNT PORTLAND. Aug. 11 tT The fish count at Bonneville dam yes terday: Chinook 413. Jack M. reel head 13M, blueback 13. total 1881. Jr Where our Dollar Buys More.' FASHIONS Lower Priei Other to 49.93 1.99 2.99 Spraque River Mr. and Mra. Joe Wilson and sons of Redding. Calif, were week end guesta of Wilson's sister and family, the Ed. L. Shadleya. Mr. and Mrs. L, George and fam ily of Boise. Ida. spent Friday and Saturday visiting Georges sisters. Mrs. S. A. Shepherd and Mra. R. C Passolt Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Coflman are home after spending past month in Kiamatn Falls. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. lake motored lo Klamath Falls Saturday where tney met Mrs. Lakes mother. Mrs. Orace Hsgen who was returning from a trip to eastern Oregon and various cities In Csllfornia. She spent the week -end with her daugh ter then returned to her home In Lakevlew Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. K. O Thompson and daughters. Mable Ellen and Donna Kay. enjoyed a show in Chiloquin Friday night. They also visited friends there. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Welch en tertained Thursday night In honor of their son. Wayne, w ho did a good Job blowing out the five candles on the pretty birthday cake. Those en Joying the affair were Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Welch. Charles Borough, Ed die, F.iton Loy, Clarene. Nancy, Di ane Welch, and the honored guest. Mrs. Noble Sanderville and chil dren. Maria and Richard., from Chemawa are visiting relatives and friends here. They will visit Mrs. Sanderville s mother. Pearl Rod ger, in Klamath Falls before rt turning home. C. H. Parks has returned to his home base In San Francisco after enjoying a 30-day leave visiting his mother, Mrs. Jennl Parks, and family. The community extends It sin cere sympathy to Mr. and Mr. Charlea L. Borough In the loss ot their tnfsnt son. Charles Benton. who passed away In Klamath Falls Thursday. August 4. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hale and daughter, 8hella Ann, of Dlerks. Ark, are visitors at the home 01 Mr. Hale parents, the Walter Kelley. The Hales ar former resi dents, and employe of American Box company. Mrs. George Lonenburg and chil dren. Nlla and Stane. of Medford spent the past week with her father. O. W. Ludwick. resident manager of American Box company. The teak fry sponsored by the Modoc Area council waa enjoyed very much by the three commit- NEW FALL SHADES IS Denier 51 Gauge NYLONS Beautiful Cobweb Sheert All Perfect First Quality Our hosiery I well known for It beauty and wearing quality . . . and each season our cus tomer rve over our wn ex clusive dance-Inspired ahade.,. Bolero Cotillion Ballet Tango A 1 -- 1 Srir'.ov. 1 pp. teemen and their wlvea from Sprague River. Those attending wer Mr. and Mra. R. T. Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Welch end Mr. and Mrs. 8. A. 8hepherd, Eugene and Dc lores. Mr. and Mr. Harvey and family from Idaho were week-end guests of Mrs. Ruth Walker. They left for their home Monday. Howard Walk er accompanied them to Klamath Falls. Mr. and Mrs, Larry Jordan t Dor la Cooper i from California are vis iting her parents. Mr. and Mra. Ro mania Cooper. Jorden Is serving with lh U. 8. army. Mrs. O. W. Ludwick has been at tending school In Ashland for the past week. Mrs. Ludwick la the third and fourth grade tescher here. Mrs. Jennie Psrks and children, R. B. and Juanlta, are visiting with the Don Parks In Redmond. The Hartley well drill Is still busy In 8prague River. They finished wells for Henry Zrk and The Friends church last week and are now on the Dlbbon Cook proierty. Ruth Walker returned to her home after spending the past two months with her sister, Mrs. Char lotte Scholia, of Klamath Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Kennerly who have been employed by American Box company hav quit their Jobs and moved to Klamath Falls. Bobby and Janire Schotta who pent the past week with their grandmother Mrs. Ruth Walker have returned to their home in Klamath Falls. Ginger Rogers Asks Divorce LOS ANGELES, Aug. II Virginia Catherine MrMath Cul pepper Ayrea Brtggs Ginger Rog ers for short want a divorce. 8hes been doing some "grievous mental uf faring" llel. th 37-year-old actress said In a com plaint yesterday, all on account of her 29-year-old third husband. Jack Brlggs. When they wer married In 1M3, she exulted: "He everything I've ever dreamed of." A property settlement waa reach ed out of court. They hav no chil dren. She asks no alimony. Olnger divorced Lew Ayrea In 1M0 and Vaudevtlllan B. J. Culpepper in 1931. Teamsters To Get Hike In Pay PORTLAND. Aug. 11 iv-A ten cent hourly pay boost and a 44 hour week take effect Monday for 460 API, teamsters working under a state-wid agreement with creamery concerns. A higher pay and shorter week wer recommended by an arbitra tion board after negotiations reached a stalemate. Teamsters hav been working a it-hour week for the creameries. The arbitration board also directed employer to make "sincere prepara tions" for a 40-hour week at the ex piration of the new agreement, which also provides for higher over urn pay. Th agreement affect creamery workera In Portland. Eugene. Salem. Pendleton, The DaUes, Medford and Vancouver, Wash. House Members Eye Vacation WASHINOTON. Aug. 11 iTl House member started planning hopefully today on a one-month vacation, starting possibly at the end of next week. The word has been quietly passed around In the cloakrooms that If several major bills still on the house docket csn be disposed of by August II. the house can get out of town and let the senate sweat It out alone. Majority Leader McCormack of Massachusetts virtually assured members of a long recess yesterday. He did so In saying that house re cesses might be In order after house passage of the president arms-aid proposal and a bill for economic as sistsnce to Korea. "We are far ahead of the senate," McCormack noted. Forester Inspects . Rogue River Area Walter Lund, assistant regional forester in charge of timber man agement In region I of the forest service, wa In th Rogue River na tion! forest this week Inspecting timber sale areaa. He waa In th Klamath district Wednesdsy and waa met by Ranger R. L. Cooper and Timber Sale Agent Oeorge Cleveland, who conducted him through the timber sale area which were (old during wartime and post-war day. Drunk Driver Held In Jail Wendell Whit Prime, 41. of Chlloquin, was lodged In the Chllo quln town Jail last night on a charge of drunk driving. He was arrested by state police on the old stretch of The Dalles-California highway and ball was set at 1250 by Justice of the Peace Lloyd Peters. Billfold Loss Reported Here Thomaa Doyle, 1345 Lookout, re ported to city police late yesterday afternoon the loss of a billfold con taining 1130 In cash and Weyer haeuser Timber company check for about 140. He aald the wallet was lost on Main between Fifth and Sixth. TRAGEDY NEW YORK, Aug. 11 (VP) Sam uel Ooppelberg, 94, one of the mil lion suffering from New York heat wave, moved his bed over near a window last night to get a bit of air. His shriek wok th neighbor at 4 a. m. today. Rolling over In his sleep, he fell out the window to death In a rear yard five floors below. Not Good for Them Instrument should not be kept In cedar cabinets, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, because the resinous matter In th wood Hoover Says US Spending 'Must Stop' FAI.O ALTO. Calif.. Aug. II (.41 Th nation today had the sober warning of It only living former president thaC lis spending policies. If unchecked, wilt rob posterity of Its Inheritance. Former President Herbert Hoover, In a significant addresa. asserted last night thai the lolled Htafea "I blissfully driving down th bark road to collectivism at tap speed." 'We hav not had a great social isation ot property." he said, "but w ar on the last mile lo collectiv ism through governmental collec tion and spending of the savings of the people." The country's president from 19JI lo 1131 spoke before an estimated 11.100 persons In the beautiful grass. carpeted Laurcne Frost Memorial bowl an lh Stanford I'nlverelfy rampus, vlrtuallv In the shadow sir the Hooter Institute and library n war, revolution and pear. The ocarsinn was his lath birth day celebration, sponsored by the university In tribute to Its most famous son. a graduate of Its first dsss In 1195 President Truman's mesaag of congratulations and good wishes waa among the thousands which cane from all ever th world. Home of them eame from foreign lands where Hoover' administration of relief established hla nam a a great humanitarian. Hoover headed a special commis sion on government orgsntaatlon which recently completed a two year study with a report recom mending economies of four billion dollars a year. In his talk, broadcast by th four major networks, h assailed th costs of government. 'Along this road of spending, lh government either take ver. which Is socialism, ar dictate Institutional and economic life, which Is fascism." be aald. Hoover said "Mr. Average Working Cltixen" now must work II days a year to support local. Stat and fed eral government. Proposed addi tional government spending would take another 20 days' work, he sstd. Police Holding Several Lost Keys Two ftstlc engagementa on Klam ath avenue were Interrupted last night by the arrival of city police. Th first. bout 1:30. reportedly involved Mr. and Mr. Amos Clar ence Reed, and both wer arrested on charges of being drunk and disorderly. They forfeited 125 ball each. The second, about midnight, was between Claire Barleen, 39. and Floyd J. Barrett, 40. Both were ar rested and poated IIS bail on charges of disorderly conduct. . Minor Accident ) Report Filed A minor automobile accident last night on Main street resulted In a S fine for Agnes Malvlna Nelson. 37. nf 313 N. 11th. City police reported Mrs. Nelson pulled out of a parking place be tween Sth and Ith and Into the path of a vehicle driven by Earl Epoch. 49. of 3434 Pershing way. She waa charged with failure to yield the right of way. MASTIRPIICI OF AMAZIMINT rlr 10 smM lerrlfW thrills over j--, f hjf j J? ALL NEW SHOW 7gjgggg I sLJldf IS' sos" ftM ilJQ JAMES MASON i V BARBARA BEL GEDDES ' I JJnlil 1,1 2 MIDHITE Tax Millage Rate In Portland Down PORTLAND. Aug. 11 1 Tax millage rates In Portland will be down 3 5 mills the fiscal year 1949 50 despite an overall boost In bud gets for th rlty and county agen clea. Multnomah County Assessor W.J. Palloon aald an upward adjustment of commercial and Industrial prop erly valuations hss permitted the millage decrease. Home owner should have slightly smaller tax bills, he said. The rat Is 51 mill compared with 53 5 mills In th 1948-49 year. Total property levlea outside th city limits may rang higher, how ever, because of school and other special district levies. OTI Pool To Get Bus Runs Evening. Saturday and Sunday bus service to the Oregon Tech pool Is being added to serve Klamath baain splashers. Bam Smith, city recreation head, announced today. Current aervlc five afternoon runs between 1 and I provld Ire rides. Th venlng achedule calla for two buses which will leav th court, house at 7:30 and 1:30 p. m. and start th return trip from th pool at 1:10 and 9:30 p. m. However, a far of 10 cent each way will be charged for the evening and week-end service, although afternoon runs will continue with out charge. The city recreation department employa buses owned by the Klam ath bus company. Navy Brass To Be Demo Speaker PORTLAND. Aug. 11 (A-VNevy Secretary Francis P. Matthewa will addresa a democratic party picnic here Sunday. . Jamea Good sell, secretary of th democratic party of Oregon, Mid Matthew will outline the adminis trations views on the CVA. He will arrive by plan an hour before th picnic starta. But Treasurer Wslter J. Pear son will be master of ceremonies and Stat Senator Austin F. Flegel will speak. Matthews also will attend th na tional Knighta of Columbus con vention which opens her next Tuesday. State Highway Employe Passes It waa learned her today that Norval II. Jones. 63. for 15 year an employ of the state highway department her, died In a Salem hospital last Saturday, after a year Illness. Funeral services were held In Salem Tuesday. 2 p. m. Mr. Jones, who had worked for th highway department for 30 years, waa transferred from Klam ath Falls to Salem In 1944. He leave hla wife. Henrietta. In Salem, a daughter and two grand children In Medford. JOLT DALLAS. Aug. II i A crane boom touched a 11.000 volt power line yesterdsy and th Jolt knock ad Herschel Hanson. Independence to the ground, but hi bum were not fatal. He waa holding a cable attached lo the boom as the eran moved along a highway her. Stronghold Woman Files Rape Charge Tt'llXAKE. Calif.. Aug. 11 Robert Sims, 34-yrar-old Texas Negro, la held In custody at lh Modoc county Jail In Altura pend ing Investigation nf a rape charge. District Attorney Charlea Ledrreri office said today. Th district attorneys office la working with Sheriff fllyn John son on lh Investigation. n& " w & "- 7, t.- I r V mm m m a 5 a.H itfi iHiMt, YlrtWl ws ft ,.h Robert Young U !A Shirley Temple U 1 john Aggy-Jy COLO CAHTOON Sim allegedly forced entry la lo th railroad ear which wu living quarters for Mrs. Sarah Lee, white cook for a Negro Southern Paclfl section crew at Stronghold. Th 53-year-old woman aald that her husband waa gone last Saturday night when the Negro entered her car and choked her Into submission. Tile woman railed an officer who in turn called the sheriff office la Alluraa. Vacuum Trouble During a tornado. 111 usually Ihe lark of air that cause trouble. As the funnel passes. It lower outside air pressure so suddenly that buildings are lorn apart a th air Inside rushea out. Item ainum m to l IsiHH - CHnw stai mrr swoii . iu wmook miw f act a a corrosive. 7