f ACE TWO
HEKALD ANO KTWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
miDAY. AUCUST It, )Uf
'Junior Livestock Show In
lule 'In The Bag' Says
Hagelstein; September 24
TULELAKI, Auf. 1 Tulelake'.
first annual 4-H club nd ruture
Farmers of Annin Junior llve
tork ihow and eale If definitely In
the bag, according to in announce
ment nude today by W. O. Hagel
ateln. president of the Rotary club,
Which will sponsor th undertaking.
September 34 hl been set the
at.
Th flrtt show, which will comblnt
a garden produce and canning ex
hibiu will be held at the high achool
(roundi and tn the aLditortum.
About 20 head of fat beet animals
are being readied by boyi and girls
of the community, and there will be
several hoi and aome lambs.
Hagelstein explained that because
plans were Indefinite until the pres
ent time, fewer animals hare been
(roomed than will be in future
years.
Land In the new addition has
been obtained under a 10-year lease
fi om the U. S. bureau of reclama
registration and Judging: Douglas
Thomas, finances; H. T. Street, con
cessions: Flt.d A. Boyd, weighing
and classification: W. O. McCly
monds Sr., sifung; W. R. Moore,
clean-up.
King Carol,
Mme. Lupescu
Wed Thursday
r r ; ;
jp''''' gir-nuj
1
LISBON, Portugal. Aug. 19 t&i
Foru.tr King Carol of Romania and
Mme. Elena Lursacu were married
thi ?monhTLt'onl "STREAMLINED MARKET OPENS Emil's new food store, 4710 South Sixth, held its grand
dence. opening this morning and sow hundreds of shoppers taking advantage of the opening day
The Rev. Hartlnisn Ivinoviich. ' and new equipment installed in this modern structure. The store replaces Emil's store No. 3,
hesd of the Romanian iGreek Or'
lion and It is plsnned to put up ' thodoxi church in Paris, came here
buildings on that sit to be used tn
the future.
The sale will start at 1 o'clock
with Charles K. Wiese, local auc
tioneer, tn the stand.
Young stock growers In the past
have had no opportunity to ex
hibit animals produced here except
at the Modoc and Siskiyou county
fairs at Alturas and Yreka and at
the state fair at Sacramento.
A film, "Green Pastures," with
Walter Brennan, Academy Award
winner playing the lead, will be fea
tured September 23-23 In connec
tion with the livestock show through
the courtesy of Vac Kallna. mana
ger of the Marcha theater.
Youngsters from Tulelake. the
Butt valley area, Merrill, Malin,
Bonanza or Henley will get In free
ef charge. Oldsters must pay the
regular charge. The Tulelake Grow,
rs will foot th bin for the chil
dren. President Hagelstein has an
nounced the following committee
tor the show: Chester J. Main, gen
eral chairman; John B. Edmonds,
publicity; Ivan Rose, Dan Craw
ford Sr., Oib Osborne, grounds
committee; Charles K. Wiese, auc
tioneer; Burton J. Hoyle. awards, j
. ' tji n f f 1 r 1 t at th ermrtnv
Th cerem.ny took place in strict
foimerly at 2220 South Sixth.
Crowd Flocks
To Opening Of
New Grocery
Hundreds of shoppers were on
Smith Trial
Postponed
The federal court trial of Rav
mand Smith, 11-year-old Klamath
Indian, has been Indefinitely post
poned from August 23 because of
th Illness of Dr. Oeorg H. Adler.
Klamath county coroner.
Smith Is accused of second degree
murder In the stabbing death of
hand to greet the grand opening ' Elmo Lobert. JJ. at Pin. Ridge early
of Emil's new. streamlined food urun',' , ., , j .
store. 4710 South Sixth, at ( o'clock I Dr Adl" "V "cheduled to b. a
,,.. . government witness tn the trial.
The new structure, housing gro-
pnvacy in Carol's villa. Only the
former monarch's chamberlain.
Ernest Durdarianu. other members!
of the royal household, and a few
close friends were present.
. Urarianu said it was Impossible
to hold th ceremony betore be
cause no Romanian church repre
sentative was In Portugal He said
special arrangements had been
made to bring the Rev. Irtnovitch
from Paris.
"This scotches one and lor all
ridiculous rumors recently circu
lated about the king being on bad ! Th. r,.. .'mirt-.ir. hot.in. .ro. ' Smith is held in jail at Portland
terms with his wife." said the mar- wry mt lresh Irulu ,ni'yf. j and his trial will be held in Port
sh.lL He added that henceforth h.kfry f00ds and delicaTes- "'i' Th young Indian is repre
Mme Lupescu title will be Prln- Mn dcp,,,. plcri ,tort senied by Klamath Tails Attorney
" Ben- I number 3. formerly located at 2320 J- c- Selu-
uuw ana aaena wnose romance j South Sixth,
flourished more than two decades i The building Is primarilv of tile
despite family objections and polit-' ,nd stucco construction. The very
wal upheavals were married In Rio UtMt K,mpm,iH is insuUed for the
De Janeiro in an -extremis" civil j customer s convenience,
ceremony in July. 1947. when Elena Spacious parking place handled
was believed at the point of death.
Admiral Peary a daughter.
Marie, who was born in th Artie
Circle, received th nickname of
-Snow Baby"
"THE NEVADA' TRAIL" !
itHfi'iMn'
hMMMWbgU.
M0Urfl
th volume of cars thst surrounded
the store this morning.
Treats were on hand for grand
opening customers including tre
hot dogs and coffee.
Gloom Clouds
Outlook For
Hawaii Strike
HONOLULU, Aug. 1 (P Nego.
nations to end 111 days of a strike
on Hawalls watertront wobbled
ahead today In a cloud of gloom.
"Another extremely dlscouraguig
session." said an employer spokes
man of yesterday's meeting. The
CIO Longshoremen's union didn't
have anything to say.
Unless some agreement Is reached
by tomorrow, the dl-.put Is to be
thrown r th lap of Cyrus Chlng.
head of the U. a. conciliation serv
ice. And Chlng doesn't even know
whether he can come to Honolulu.
The employer spokesman said
that In yesterday's seajlon the talks
reached the wag Issue.
Harry Bridges, head of th In
ternational Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen's union, said the 2000
WASHINGTON. Aug. 1 k- A ",.... , "I
senai vol on Ua of federal funds ,h." . V:, k,Vi- .
to build power lines was delayed to- tnn "cn nourlr ncn"
day by a one-man filibuster. originally demanded. H. refitted to
In an effort to speed psssag oi ' " .- ., : v.
Filibuster
Stalls Power
Line Proposal
Servicemen OK
Following Crash
u I'vutmnm t w wij a
l-Thlrty-fv. American rvlce- ; h V?n.tr I Meanwh.. gov-rnment s.evedore,
men escaped drowning last night ..... 'u.:.Tj I worked four ships. Furthermore.
when their transport plane plunged " '1? uml, ,h unmior I Hawaii's Stevedores. Ltd.. announced
into St George . bsy. near th. U. a ! "'uS "."ech on f JuT non-union, stevedore, would go
V. w.. 'J,..,00 WMt amendment, to cut funds for the ? ' Jomnt today
A stockholders' meeting was called
i"UiiuiiJ. o..,h .H.nl.lr.lmn
The plane was en route from the ! .,. .. . irrn. to discuss dissolution of th firm
A sores to Wes lover field. Masa. It loophole " on"in'I'' l th start of the
wa to refuel at Harmon field. j p k ,0 minutn on the I dock strike and hired non-union
Th plane ditched in th bay and , h ,k. t worker.
and onto raft, and reached shore.
appropriations committee. Then he
offered an amendment to the
amendment, and spoke 30 minutes
more.
His amendment would have al
lowed the agency to spend siOO.OOOl ONTARIO. Ore, Aug.
new Timber line lodge road on for operation or its transmission ' Rainwater Jones Is
Mount Hood will be surfaced and line system in place of the S330.0OO town's whistle again,
No one was reported missing.
ROAD JOB
PORTLAND, Aug. 19 (Pi The
oiled by E. C. Hall company, Port
land, for S232.4M under recom
mendation for award made today
by W. H. Lynch, division engineer
for the bureau of public roads.
Th road is to be completed next
summer.
limitation proposed by th com- sure for how long
mil tee. ( The whistle. Installed n Jane'
Thomas withdrew that amend- : laandry and traditional In Ontario
ment and offered another to make as the dinner signal, haa blown op
It 1400.000. Then he began another I tw month f controversy here.
30 minute speech. He said he would 1 Albert Puchs, who lives near the
laundry, said It "Jarred his nerves."
He and 7g other resident, petitioned
the city council to sllenc th thing.
But other resident, contended
they loved the whistle. Moreover,
said some, their children wouldn't
come home to dinner unless they
heard K. Th council decided It
could blow.
At that point awmeone tok mat
ters nu his wa hand, and stale
the thing.
Th city was silent for a week
until Rainwater Jones got another
whistle and Installed It.
a " smrii
V Ik f I 1
v--X a m 1111! I 1 ! -I
! I 9rfwlm fi' oner ouirr unenamenu uir.
ESQUIRE .THEATER S
'Z STARTS
uJi-iiia reimNiTF iw n a AiK.iii v mi vn mtr i 1
. "KNIK OKVi. UWUAf U. .J) I It a THIt.TTiraJMItTt II
. "WZjravV 1 I l'-i ml 1 I I I , . I
pa.l f i A SXWHV f -v-eX-J 11 llllllil llli'lll I IH l.lri 1:1 Uilii f W ..JTTTI
. X. 2-- . . J- lit I J with murder... ten stori.s f -tJ
VPf fal p' jH m BOWERY BOYS fiM
IIILI Ui 111 Mil llll I 1 1 1 ft I 1 1 V I 11 ir) i.V II Hv ' Si lliifst.asvn.
Rainwater Jones
Is Tooting Again
ipi
blowing the
but he Isn't
Mother Takes
Life Of
Baby Daughter
CHICAGO. Aug. 19 ( A young
mother from Astoria, Or., who
first told pollr that her six-day-old
daughter was strangled by a
Negro prowler waa quoted by vo
ile early today as saying "I killed
her."
Folic Capt, John Enrlght said
th woman. Mrs. Dorothy Skeoch.
31, admitted killing th child only
a few hours after they arrived
home from th hospital, where the
baby was bom.
Ill baby, Busan, waa found dead
in bed Willi a plastic diaper knotted
tightly around her neck.
Mrs. Skeoch, a former payroll
clerk at th University of Chicago,
was quoted by Enrlght as saying
sh hsd been depressed because
her husband, Thomas, 31, hsd been
unemployed sine h lost hi. Job
si a dockworker two weeks ago.
"There waa no money coming In
and I couldn't stand seeing the
baby go through what I have gone
through," Enright said th woman
told him.
Mis related. Enright added, that
while she waa pondering the fam
llya plight the baby began whim
pering and that aha then tied the
dtaiier around the rhlld s neck.
After the child died. Mrs. Skeoch
said her first thought was to at
tribute th strangling to a Negro
prowler. On that Impulse, she told
police, she ran through their side
apartment screaming and finally
to the apartment of a neighbor.
Mrs. Viola Venkus, 33.
"Something happened to my
baby. A colored man did It," Mrs.
Venkus said the mother cried.
Together Mrs. Skeoch and Mr
Venkus returned to the apartment
where Mrs. Venkus unravelled the
diaper and summoned a fire de
partment rescue squad. After fell
nig to revive the child. Hi firs
men called police.
Dart Sews
.'
(Continued from Pag One)
lug overtime In Washington, chain
smoking rlgaretlea feverishly, fig
uring out how and where to get rid
of Ui suffering agricultural sur
pluses th Truman administration
is planning to buy up at parity
price In order to keep th farmers
voting th Democratic ticket.
BND ther was that Eastern sen
n ator bark In th middle laoo t
who gross In his plac lu congress
and allowed vehemently that the
whole III Weslern part of
our comment, which a few starry
eyed enthusiasts wer then wauling
to take away from lh Indians, con
sisted of nothing more valuabl than
sagebrush and Jackrabblla and the
wltole of It wasn t worth two measly
dollars.
a wouldn't know for sure, but I
suspect that his descendant, are
now living In Los Angeles and
wondering wher th heck they
could find an open space big enough
to have a picnic If Uiey could only
tore their way through the con
gested freeway and boulevard traf
fic and gel ther without losing all
their fenders.)
T SOMETIMES think that If w
could chloroform all th statistic
ians, admlnster twilight sleep to all
the economist, and Incarcerat In
deep dungeons all the prophets and
Farm Land
Tax Talk
To Be Held
A meeting of ranchers, banker
and businessmen la scheduled for
August 91 at Henley high school
for a discussion of taxation apprais
als on farm lands.
Th county assessor's nfflr ha
contacted representative person. In
each community In th county to
take part In the discussions, but ex
tends an Invitation to any persons
Interested In th subject to attend
and take part.
The otflc la now working on a
reappraisal of Klamath county farm
lands and haa gotten to th point
wher sum sort of yardstick I
necessary for determining equitable
appraised values. Assessor Oils Met
sker aald.
Purpos of the meeting Is to get
a cross-section of opinion on land
value, for future guidance In ap
praisals for tax purposes.
Th meeting will start at I p a
Sugar fixed In green leaves of
plants annually la estimated to rspfj
resent energy equal to 300 billion
tons of coal.
prognostlrators, thus Isolating our
selves from the dangerous future
and forcing ourselves to concentrate
on the never-too-terrlble problem
of th Immediate present, w might
get somewhere.
High Temperatures
To Continue
High temperatures in the 90 s will
continue for the week-end, the
wesiheiiuan said today, although
there Is a possibility of thunder
showers In nearby mountains.
The low predicted for tonight Is
from 49 to 47. Estimated high Sat
urday la 91. Friday , top tempera
ture waa 79.
Burglars Grab
Saddle, Clothing
Burglars entered the bam and
house of the Dixon canyon ranch,
owned by Olen Dehllnger. Wednes
day night, stealing a saddle, clothing
and other articles.
Deputy Sheriff Marlon Barnes said
the loot included a woman's black
two-piece gabardine suit, dun towel.
and a red and white checkered table
cloth.
The saddle was round-skirted and
double-rigged, with "Dave" stamped
on th cantl and Inch and a half
hearts stamped around the border.
Want AH. nhmeH, to MM 1 K-fnra
11:30 a. m. appear the aam day!
S1PECBAL!
"PACKAGED SERVICE"
$3
the best and most complete
LUBRICATION & WASH
IN TOWN
free pick-up and delivery gladly
CO.
DICKB.illlLLER
OlDSMOBIlI FISK TIRES CADILLAC
7th and Klamath Phong 4103
US Population
Shows Big Gain
WASHINOTON, Aug. 19 tm Th
United State population Is growing
at the rat of 300.000 a month and
may reach IM.000,000 by Novem
ber 1.
This report from the census bu
reau said that th estimated popula
tion was 149.319,000 on July 1.
The bureau also estimated that
in April this year ther were 3 -937.000
famllle In the U. 8., as
compared with 33.1M.OOO In 1940.
Car Prowls Net-
Fender Skirts
A garage burglary and two minor
car prowls were reported by city
police this morning.
Prowler, .truck at automobile.
owned by Mrs. Roy Swedln, 1930
Main, and Randell Poster, 1319 Mon-
clalre, taking fender skirt. In each
Instance.
Chet Moore, 1944 Auburn, reported
an S-h.p. Sea King outboard motor.
hand aaw and a chest of car
pentry tool, taken from hi. garage.
ISMOet
llllCBf.Ilv.ru
njured Baby
Recovering Nicely
Paul Walters, 11 -month-old baby
who lost the sight of his left eye
as the result oi a strange accident
In which he was struck by a tele
phone, la doing nicely at Klamath
Valley hospital today.
The little boy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom E, Walters, was Injured Wed
nesday when a telephone fell from
Its table, striking him In the face.
Dim
Mrs VTniv I ..... a T-l .
... ... .,i,,n, ui irnnni,
mothee nf Mrs Mlilnn ntal n-..-
awsy In Stanley, Wise., Thursday,
August 19 following a malor oper
ation, Mr.. Stair left Thursday
evening on me plane lor Stanley
not knowing of her mother', passing.
Come Come Come
EVERYBODY'S WELCOME
Let on expert .how you how to take the work out of housework! Learn how
to gave time and money in getting mali. Find out how to do your laundry
while you take the children to gchool . and many more homemaking
ghortcutg.
COME TO OUR
HOMEMAKING PARTY
TUESDAY, AUG. 23
2:00 P. M.
PELICAN THEATER
Miss Christine Dent,
Westinghouse Home Economist
will show you how to
Cook a mouth-watering meal while you're
not even In the kitchen.
Make froien dessert, on the double quick.
Cook or waih for 2 or 22 with equal eaie.
And lots, loH more.
FREE ADMISSION
FREE DOOR PRIZES . . . Westinghouse Table
Appliances
APPLIANCES USED IN DEMONSTRATION
WILL BE AWARDED TO HIGHEST BIDDER!
Zjart Sjd APPLIANCES
xA
Th first us of Iron for rails
was In th form of thin .trap laid
on top of wooden rails.
Don't mis. a good bet .hop th
Want Ads every day I It pay. I
v -.V-? "VMM w D"yvltK a
623 Klamath Are.
Phone 8886
r
Til