k
SATURDAY, AUO. 17, l4T
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH PALLS. OR ICON
PACI MINI
1 Norwegians Hail U.S.
Sailors For Masterful
Artie Submarine Rescue
JUDGE Joe B. Johnson, pro
fessor of onimol husbondry,
Oregon State college, will pass
expirf opinion on entries of
livestock ot the Rotory-spon-T
sored H ond FFA show
storting Sunday ot the fair
grounds. Rambo Picks
Up Points
At Pendleton
prsDi rroN. or. Aug. n .
Th rrndlrlnn Rounilup. which aaw
oil record broken yalrday. mrhw
li tlni climax Shi afternoon wilts
til l"P winners HU uncertain.
Contention fur th Bm Jackson
all-around rhamplunahip trophy re
niaina close after two daya1 com- i
petition. 1
l.rn Hanbo, eiitael aolnl- I
rnrff emang lh natiaaV rdf
performers, rami arfc itrnnilr
yesterday after dismal edecla
earlier.
H crerkrd th roundup bundog
I ins record br tossing ateer In
I a errotidt Th previous mar, vl
Just two day previously, wa IS
cotMl by Oral Zimwalt. Wutt
Creek. Mont.
Officials said Ramba. from
abandon. 4'allf, baa arned shews
tan paints hat. Bwvtng hlni le
paint hr4 f other eompell
tara la th year's all-around cww
bay till.
f 111 mediocre performencea In
earlier Pendleton event, however,
left him lagging tor th roundup
till. He wa not even leading In
tmlldnggmg. nienn Trier. Modesto,
Calif . who downed hit first steer
In 11 seconds and hu aeeond In
had a two-steer averas ot
I I seconds to top thai event.
School Deposit
Plan Changed
A new tyatem for deposit will
be liiiiltuled at Klamath Union high ,
achoul this fall. According to James
Hrown. prinripal. a SS deposit will
b akrd fnm each atudent when 1
he euiera high arhool. Thu fee will 1
b charged only otic during the
atudent a high arhool career, and It
will rover locker fee and th u
of physical education, library and
muAlral drpsrtment.
In the pant 110 has been collected
for the four-year period, with 12 SO
taken In earn year per atudent for
hall and gym locker drpoMta. Charg
ing a drpoail every semeatrr has
In the paal neceMltated eitra work
on th pari of both the teachers
and atudrnu. With th new ar
rangement refunds on depoalta will
b given only to the senior data
and withdrawing stuaents.
Other Items of coat to th ttudenta I
ar text books. Optional expendl-1
lure during Ui year are the stu
dent activity ticket, which provides
admission to all athletlo contests
and some school venu, and the
t Krater, the school paper and annual,
I .Tha El Rodeo.
Rains Spread
Here Unlikely
Scattered thunder and lightning
slnrms In the Deschutes forest are
not expected to touc h the Klamath
and Fremont forests where week
end weal her Is prrrilcted as much
more favnrnble In keeping down the
fire hsuird.
Klamath Forest Protective asso
ciation's forecast for this sector lists
scattered cloudiness with a humidity
low of between 20 and 25 per cent.
The regional weather foreeaat
nakra no mention of week-end
rain although Klamath people
were easting a wary eye akyward
at gathering clouds this morning.
. Anticipated maximum tempera
ture Is SB with a low tonight of 44. '
Yesterdays high went to S2, and
th low last lllght, 411 degrees.
nAt'tillTER BORN
A daughter was born at Corvalllt
last night to Mr. and Mrs. M. 1).
Alcorn of Klamalh Falls. The new
comer Is a second child, having a
brother, Danny. She Is grand
daughter nf Mrs. Aaron Hoffman
of this city.
rOHTMANTKHH OFFICIAL
BOSTON, Aug. 27 (At Thomas
It. Roe, Oastnn, Ore., was elected
(a vice president of the National
league nf District Postmasters nf
jh United Slates at the 46lh an
nual convention yesterday.
HAMMKItKrVvT, Norway, Aim 87
!) I'll rearu of S4 men from tli ;
rsploalon riven U. b submarine :
Cochino waa hailed by vr'eran
Norwegian aallora today at a mas
terful teat ol arainaluhlp. I
Moat of tha 3000 clllsriis of Oil
imrlli ra town, ralarert anions 1
Utrin, turned out In rain and wind
to welcome th survivors nd th
turn of th ubniarln Tusk, whu
wived Uiem from death when Uir !
L'lxhlnu went down yeaterday In
ruuuti Arctic tcaa. 1
haven men war leal. 'I heae
were a civilian technician aboard
lh Corhlno and lit ot th 'luak's
complement. i
Norwegian aallon know the J
power of thus wind and water, j
They pralaed t'mdr. Kobrrl L. I
K. YYorlhintlon ef Oakmonl,
aklpprr of lh luak, far hi (kill
In maneuvering that rrat along
aid when a second blaat aboard
th Cochin mads It evident ah
waa doomed. They talked toe of
th handling f th rubber boat,
dispatched on by n from th
Tusk tn th heavy aeaa and dark
naa with medic at auppllea at th
first algn f lh t achino'a dat
Uraa. Deapit th danger of buckled
plalea, intormed soured aaid
WurUiliigton moved In cluee enough
for th Cochlno'a men to Jump lo
th Tusks narrow deck. Minute
later, Ui Cochino went down.
Col. Kal Kaamuaaen, U. S. mili
tary attach In Norway, aald lh
two ploaiona on the Cochino oc
curred 10 minutes apart. They were
believed to b In th battery room.
'Ill two ubniarlnea, together
with lh Toro and Curaalr. were on
cold-water training maneuver oil
Norway, an American ally under
the North Atlantic fart. The Co
chino wat one ol lh United States'
newest super-aubmarlnea. blia waa
equipped with th anorkcl urcaih
Ing devir which enabled her lu
stay under water lor long periods
lh iaak' ia men an wer
loal wer wahed from a rubber
boat,
flu of th aurvitori suffered
burnt.
Th Tuk rushed them to llam
merfeat, which Ilea 210 miles fruin
th Husalan port of Murmansk, for
medical atlenilon. All but on wer
released from the hoapiui alter
examination. Ins condition wat
dejarribed today as "considerably
better."
Cmdr. 8 V. Bmrlirill of th Nor
wegisn naval high command told
newsmen ther no reason to
be turprUed t the presence ot
American hip near Norway t Arc
tic coaat.
"We knew about It long In ad
vance and It 1 only natural that
they want to train their crewt
under titoa conditioni," he aald.
Air Mishap
Kills Five
BRtlHHICLa. Belgium. Aug n
Th Belgian Sabena air line an
nounced five persons were killed
today in a forced landing of one
of Ita plane ner Leopoldville,
Belgian Congo.
Three crewmen and two paas
rngrra lost their Uvea. AU were
Belgians. Th other 14 pasaeruiera
and a natlv steward were luted
a Injured or slightly Injured.
Th plane wat on a regular lllght
between Elisabrihville. In the south
of Hi Belgian Congo, and Leopold
Till In the west.
Portlond Business
Fees Foce Test
PORTLAND, Aug. J7 iJV-Pnrt-landt
merchant will carry their
contest of Ui city's new business
license fees to th state tuprcme
court.
Th Portland Retail Trade bureau
said It would appeal a circuit court
decision here last week In which
the fet were called "pestiferous"
but were ruled legal.
The bureau meanwhile advised
members to pay the fees, but to
tun statements saying tliey were
paid under protest.
Texas
Musical Messengers
IF YOU HAVENT, YOU ARE MISSING SOMETHING
THAT YOU WOULD REALLY ENJOY
Sunday Evening, 7:30
EVANGELIST G. B. McDowell's
Subject
"Going After The Right Thing The Wrong Way"
r- J-.- I r rr--rv e 1
l5)' r.'.t
I::1jiM
I"ul (Hover (Song Leader)
Tun In Dlly KFJI MON,
McCorkles, All
Eight Of Them,
Out Of Jail Now!
KRASKI IS, Ind . Aug. 7 (Vr--Th
franklin pollr nation Is
ilii Ut b pollr t at Ion again
torlav Infttrad of a rooming houat.
Tha Mrt orklra all right
(htrtn ara moving mui.
Tltt mollirr. Mra. Ruhr Mc
Curhlr, and hrr mrn rhlldrrn,
tanging In aga from S to II,
rama hrr from Bonnlvlllr, Kjr..
for tha tomato rannlng araaon
Thrr couldn't find a plara to lira
and movrd Into tbr pollra tta
tlwn yralrrdar.
It Isn't hard to guraa wh
found a houar Tor Oirm. It was
a potlrrman, t'aptaln Kobrrt
Hamplr.' and tha Mi or k Ira will
move out todar.
Monday Meet
For Teachers'
School Plans
Teacher of school district No. 1
and 2 will begin their organisation
and In servlc program at Klamath
Union vigh school Monday, August
3V, preparatory to lh openuif of
KhooL ,
' Th program will begin at S:M
a.m. when teacher meet with
prlnclpala In room 2l. A grnerat
assembly featuring Introduction f
new Seachera and th program f
lh arhool year lMS-Se by Hupt.
f City Kchaole Arnold L. Cralapp
will b brtd at a.m.
Following a second leachcrs-prtn-clpalt
meeting at 4 a.m. will b an
assembly at 10:30. Vern Swanaen,
staff member ot the general exten
sion summer art school, will tpeak
on "Moilern Art and Contemporary
kJlvlronmenU"
After noon Intermlaalon Monday,
J. V. LaClalr. director of audio-visual
education, will present "Broader j
Concept of Methods" at a general
assembly. i
Discussion groups will b held ,
from 1st to 3 30 pm. followed by
a bnef Intermission and at 1:45. the
serving ot refreshment In the Mills
arhool music room. I
Closing activity 4or Monday will
be held at the Mills auditorium with;
Dr. Henry Htevens, assistant director .
of th general extension division of
th list system of higher educa
tion, speaking on "Adult and Post
tilth Kchool Education."
Tueeday'e araalma will begin
with showing at th film "Learn
ing la I nderaland Children." Its
th Kt llfi auditorium at t a as.
More dleruaaton group will follow
at I II.
A three-part assembly Is planned
for II am. Tuesday, with "Recrea
tion, Present and Future" by a mem- ;
ber of the city recreation committee, i
"Summary of Hahn, Campbell Re
port" by Chamber of Commerce '
Manager Charles Btark. and "Out
look for Xnduatrlal Development" by I
Frank Jenkins, publisher of The
Herald and Newt.
"Life Adjustment Education for !
Youth" la the general topic for an j
asaembly at 1 JO p m. tn the KUHS,
auditorium. Th classroom teacher's !
report will be given by Charles Mr- j
Lin. principal's report by KUI18I
Principal James L. Brown, and
superintendent's report by Oralapp. j
A question and answer period will j
follow lh report.
Following afternoon Intermission'
will be a report at 1:30 pm. on the '
National Education association con
vention by Delegate Eva Burkhalter.
tlroup meetings at teaehera fa
variawa grade dlvlalen will occupy
from t a.m. te S m. Wednesday.
and a faculty plcnle will cloa In
day at 1 a'clorb.
Freshmen and eighth graders
register at t am. Thursday, and
teacher meet with their respective
principals at thru schools.
All student report Friday, wltb
KUHS students at ( 30 am.. Junior
high at ( 40 a.m.. Pelican and Con
ger at g:45 a m. and Mills. Riverside,
Roosevelt, Fremont and Falrvlew at
( a m.
FATAL ACCIDENT
SAt EM. Aug. 27 (P A bulldoter
caught on a tree root, overturned
and rolled down a 75-foot bank
Into a power shovel yesterday at
tha Detroit dam site, killing Carl
ton Adolph Olnhold, 40. Salem. He
had been operating the bulldoser.
; Special TfluMc
by Texas Musical Messenger on Their Electric
Vibro Harp, Piano and Piano Accordions
NOTICE
Greot Revival Sweep on Another Week. Thi Week
I Your Last Chance te Hear Our Evangelist
MONDAY NIGHT
Greet Divine Healing Service. Thousand Hove lean
Healed ond Blessed in Their Service Throughout
the United State, Canada and Europe
Klamath Temple
1007 Pine Street
D. B. Anderton, Pastor
THROUGH FRI, tl IS A. M, BAT.
"SNOOPY" ENDS UP IN SILO PIT "Snoopy," 650-pound heifer, owned by Everett Lamp
son of Osceola, Wis., gazes plaintively from the deep silo pit into which she dove through
a 20-inch opening while being chased by her owner. Now "Snoopy" must wait until enough
silage hos been put into the empty silo to raise her to ground level before she can have
ony hope of getting out of her predicament.
Raw Materials Cost Hike
May Increase Living Cost
By 8AM DAW SOX
NEW YORK, Aug. 77 Wi Prices
ar going up on a number ot raw
material and product tht enter
Into every day living. I n tome
case the advance are likely to
be short-lived. In others they are
aeaaonal. But some are likely to
tick long enough to show up In
the monthly bills for some tim to
come.
rd s lores wUI reflect later the
price hlkea at aeuree that began
Ihle week la augar. coffee, lettuce,
margarine and sardine. Advanc
ing milk prtrea ar forecast ia
soma mllksheda.
It may take a little longer tor
you to feel the week's Jump In the
price of Douglas fir and southern
pin lumber. ' But If they stick,
they'll show up In housing cost.
It Tea ar considering what It
will coat la beat your ham thi
winter, yau may note that the
price of fuel l haa started up al
ready, that coal coat mare. There
are even rumbNnga and warning
that a severe winter might cause
temporary aherlag In aome
spoil.
Th price of ethyl anti-knock
fuel price Is set to advance Oc
tober 1, which may or may not
affect your gasoline bill later.
The price ot silver has advanced
steadily this week. This It the sea
son when th silver flatware mak
er buy the metal for processing
In expectation of th Chnsunss
trade.
Bras and bronn Ingots hare
Just gone up In price. This hike
reflects earlier price advancea In
basic non-ferrous metal. The pro
ducers of led. sine and' copper
think they touched bottom on the
prices of their metals In June, ana
say that the price advancea since
should hold. Their products are
used in almost every durable ap
pliance you buy.
Steel ecrap prices, weak for
months, have started climbing
back up again about S3 a ton In
recent days.
Alto, freight rates on the rail
roads are going up. adding that
much more to th cost of getting
not only steel but almost all other
commodities.
Against all the price advance,
af course, can be arayed a list
t price reduction recently. The
price trail Is na one-war street.
Clothing price have ben eat,
here and there. Meat and ather
food Item are expected I tn
price Ihla talL
And there la a large and
thoughtful sector of economic ob
servers who think trie recent slow
Evangeilit . B. McDowell
Speaker
liSe l M, SUN. 4:W P. M.
aWtaaaM-i aw i .toasaatii
-J. 'I
ing down In price declines and the
recent upswing In many commodi
ties should be called a lull rather
than a reversal of a trend.
These are the ones who believe
that what has been called the
mildest postwar deflation In his
tory 1 really an Indian summer,
a false and deceptive respite be
fore the real winter of price drops
sets In.
Car Ditched; Woman
'Slightly Shaken'
Mrs. Isabel Dicks, of San Juan
Capistrano. was slightly shaken
last night when the car the was
driving rolled off of highway 97
near Midland.
According to reports, the car was
apparently caught tn a gust of wind
and pulled onto the soft shoulders,
and hence rolled on off the road.
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Clayton, 1717
Mam street, witnessed '.he acci
dent as they drove by. and stopped
to give aid to the shaken woman.
Mrs. Dicks mas not hospitalized.
Wsnt Ads don s cots they pay!
Evangelist
James AA. Alley
ae iosicl Alley
(BELL RINGER)
dnhUmaiLonallif JGwwn
VUw Jz&tcuneni fcvanasdid
7:30 Nightly
Aug. 28
RAE
..M - i 'I. IT.-.. .
'Little Pancho',
Bribed By Cops,
Finally 'Sings
City polks pazxlrd for awhile
latt nifhl arrr one of the most
baffltnjc myMcrttr to confront
them for many month m.
Offireri had picked op a tittle
black haired, bmrrrooted Utd on
Klamath arenne, and eren after
erveral rand? bars at he would
rereml vn that his name was
"Little Pancho." s
A few randy ban more, and
aa added pack ml torn r two,
and InTesticatina; f fleers foand
out what his dad's name waa.
It waa -Hit Pancho.
Finally the information piled
p. and from It the harmed
officers finally f leaned at least
an approximation of the where
a boats of his home. Farther In
vest, cation, and the little fellow
was packed off to his home at
n?S Commercial. Little Pan
rho'a real name is Merle Es
panoxa, and he's nly years
old.
More than one-fifth of the total
I population of England and Wales
I Uvea in Greater London.
and
Except
Saturday
to Sept. 16
BOND ALLEY
First Chtristeaim Qmnh
Ninth ond Pin
May Be Last
Convention
For GAR Vets
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 17 UPV-In-dlanapolia,
scene of the first na
tional encampment ot the Grand
Army of the Republic M years ago,
today rolled out the welcome mat
for the Last gathering of union vet
eran. A half dozen of the surviving IS
members of tha OAR are expected
for the encampment, which begin
officially 8unday. rive affiliated
groups with a membership of about
2600 also are to meet Sunday
through Wednesday.
Two of the civil war veteran
are coming by air. On af them,
( harley f 'happrl. IK, t Long
Reach, Calif., aenioe vie com
mander, says he'll be "proud to
be the laat commander.' Tha
arcond b James A. Hard, IS,
Rochester, N. V.
Hard has said he favors another
encampment next year, but Indi
cated he would not push the matter.
The OAR last year amended Its
rules and regulation to nuke the
1949 meeting at Indianapolis the
last.
Theodore Fen land. IS, ef Port
land, tire., national commander-in-chief,
la expected t arrive by
a peels I train later today.
Albert Woolton. 10J, Duluth.
Minn., also la due to arrive by train
this afternoon.
For Joseph Cloves. 105, Pontlac,
Mich, the last encampment will be
his first. Clovese, the only surviving
Negro member, will arrive tomor
row by train.
A special hospital room ha been
set up in a hotel at which the
centenarians will stay.
Japs Regain
U.S. Rights
8AM FRANCISCO. Aug. 27 VP,
Assailing the army's wartime west
ern defense command for a nazl
Uke doctrine." the ninth VS. circuit
court of appeals ha affirmed
restoration of citizenship to three
Japanese-Americans.
The opinion yesterday sharply
condemned tha wartime exclusion
from the West Coast of persons
of Japanese blood.
Tnt three who regained their
citizenship were Mrs. Mlye Mae
Murakami, now of Torrence: Mrs.
Tsutake Sumi. West Los Angeles:
and Mrs. Mutsu Shlmlxu, now of
Roscoe.
GOOD REASON
VENTURA, Calif, Aug. 27 !
Several months ago Dlanna Cyrus
Bixby had to give up her plan to
fly solo around the world. The
reason Is now apparent. Petite Mrs.
Bixby, 26, gave birth to a five
pound, 13 ounce girl at Ventura
1 County hospital yesterday.
r - - -
JAMES M. ALLEY
Rae Bond Alley plays
Swiss Piccolo Bells,
Eurooean Musical Glasses,
New England Sleigh Bells,
Western Cow Bells.
Pictures will be shown.
Special solos, duets and
chorus choirs
S., Klamath Fa Hi
. . . And The "Ram
Leaped Over . . .
It Says Here
RIC.(. INS. Ida, Aug. tl (Pi
What would you do If yon met a
mountain ram far So far en a
narrow trail?
Kight iporlamrn. an a fishing
trip in central Idaho, aald ana
of their number cam upon the
ram aa h blkrd up a trail te
tax a picture. Then warn t
The man knelt. The ram leaped
over. Both continued en their
way.
Th eight men. from Paratella,
Touched for th ttory but refuted
la aay which af th octet waa
Involved.
Hard-To-Find
Sheriff Found
By Reporters
PORTLAND. Aug. 27 (IP) The
Oregonian, whose reporters have
been hounding the courthouse look
ing for Sheriff M. L. Elliott, finally
found him yesterday after a 600
mlle airplane flight.
He was vacationing with his wife
and another couple at Lake Tahoe.
Th Oregon iao. which haa sup
ported a reran movement agalnaS
the ahmcriff. dispatched reporters
t Tahoe upon a report that he
waa vacationing there.
The sheriff, who contends the
press It persecuting him, promptly
took off from hi hotel room for
Reno.
Reporters finally managed to talk
to him by sitting in ambush In the
notei looDy until he returned.
"Im taking a vacation," he told
them. "I'll be hark tn SW4Un,4
Saturday afternoon." He had been
registered at the hotel since Tues
day. Os th Want Ads for Quick RasulUI
Oar kaasvledcj yf
tfe ttrtaqtb ad)
fairMssof Irsaroaw
Compoaies, p4s er'
ability to serw omr
cheers l.dWIdgal
weed's, prevld tvocb
policy holder wit
po strive prorectiotv'
J8H1 SANDHEYtl!
CsMMllW) ,
INSURANCE
' aa ,H ar. - riims t