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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1951)
SATURDAY, OCTOfWIt 13. 10M HERALD AND NEWS KLAMATH FALIA OREOftN PACE NINE If. dtff mfJS vr ( . 3 MRS. DALE NICKLES (Dt-llii Johnson) with one of her hos tesses irliilit) Carol lliirrilt, In the parly roum at the Elk's rliili, where a bridal shower was Kiven for her October 0. She was married at the Community Congregational church on September 25. Mrs. Harold Hnrritt was co-hostess with her daughter to the guest of honor and forty guests- Mrs. Nicklcs is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson 2(105 Vine avenue. She and her husband arc now living at I.enz, Oregon. Ma'in Legion I MAUN The Malm American Legion auxiliary No. M met at the Mailt) Community church Moil clay evening. October I, wllh luu i nrembcrs prciriil. The bualneM meeting wan con ducted by Kinina Wilde president and plana were made tnr food sale to be held at Kallne's "lore on Hatitrday October 13 starling at II a I".1 rood aale chairman will bo Norma I'rlroi-clt. Jt was reported that 134 U waa cleared at Uio lam food aale which was held on Brplrmber 31. A Halloween party will be held again thla year lor auxiliary and legion membera children and alno lor tile Intermediate (ilrl scouts, who, ero aiMituiorcd by the auxil iary. The party will be held Octo ber 31 at Uie Broadway hall with llarel Kallna end Linme Wlldo 111 charge. IMana Wert alno made lor llJtvett- poUurfc- aimpee to be h- Id October M at 6:30 p.m. In in basement of the Malm church lor membera and famine of le nlonalren end auxiliary members An outside speaker Is expected to be prenenl lor the meeting. Meeting Of Merrill Library MEimiLL-The Merrill Library Tlrldjte club will meet Thurwlny October II, at the home ol Mia. Henry Cox lor a 1 3U desert lunrheon. Mr. Ray Merrill It co hostess and all members ere urged to attend. Little Rest In Hospital NEW YORK Anyone who has tried, vainly, to sleep In a hospital will find a chnmplnn In Dr. Nor until F. Miller. Writing In Ihe Joiimul of the lown medlritl socl. ely. he goen to but eipeclully lor lha new mother, who, ho pays, Deeds mainly rest niter her baby In horn, Bol "there In no prolonged re frc.ihi.ig nlumber. nor In there like ly lo be, for whether the patient In In ward or prlvrile room, her prenenco In a hnnpliul today ap pear lo be a mnlter of nccondury Impnrtnnce. 8"Condnry lo Ihe ob solete but fixed honpllnl routine, secondary to the ncheilules of the helpers, orderlies, nurses and iI'Lttorn. ( At some absurd hour she isi nwitkoncd. The technic used lor ; this cruel procedure will, ol courne i vary. It may be a thermometer ! Inserted Into her mouth, n pitcher ' ol Ice water placed on her table, j or mnlructlonn lo, get washed and , ready lor brenklunt, which com-1 monly arrive an hour or two laler. I "Any attempt to anntch brief ! rest during the remainder of the 1 day In likely to be Interrupted by i Ihe VIP's very Important people such ns her baby, the cleaning woman, the nurse, the doctor and , others. "I do not menn lo he facetious In Uius rommrnllng upon the till- j llculty of obtaining rest In a hos pital. I seriously believe this has become one ol the moat Important bugaboos of hospital life." 15th ANNUAL KLAMATH BASIN POTATO FESTIVAL QUEEN'S BALL Saturday, October 13 Merrill Community Hall Candidates: Wilma Paulk, Merrill Polly Haynes, TuUlakt , Betty Lou Gober, Henley . Leah Dye, Bonanza - Barbara Saylers, Malm Velma Reese, Dorris ! ' ' ' i Music by Admission -l'hoto by Wes Ciiidcrian Lorraine Johnson An the result oi receiving n't mnny nnswera such an: "I would cot know a good painting II 1 ' one," from local peoole, the Klnmatli Art association han de cided to do MinieUtlng about It. this protect Is right down our alley, because the reason we or ganized wan to create In Klamath Falls Uie appreciation and under standing ol art. We have decided lo devote all of our meetings lor the coming year to a comprehensive series ol Illustrated talks on art apprecla lUm. These will not be high brow lectures but a series ol curelully planned movies and slides from the Audlo-vlaual libraries ol our Kinmnirt Union hlith school and Oregon extension division. Each meeting wUl be conducted by a local artist who han had special training in art hlalory and art appreciation. First ol the serlen will be "How lo Look at g Painting." It will be conducted bv Ihe new arl super visor ol county schools, Ktchurd ReUiholts, who received his train ing at the University ol Minnesota. As Relnholtx In tenchlmi a univer sity accredited courne here lor t achera thin winter, the Art asso ciation leeln verv lortunate to have him an a member and to have his neip m planning win vnnt program. Now lor those of you who have often wished you could look at a picture with more of an under building ol the artist's viewpoint, or be better qunlllled to select a picture to harmonise Willi the decor of your home, this Is Just your cup of ten. The pictures that will be shown are from Uie KncyclopedU Brit tanlca'a collection ol American art ists and are alk realistic pictures not modern. We neleeled thin pnrtleulnr series ol slides wlUi you In mind. Our meeting day han been changed Irom Wednesday lo the third Monday ol each month to enable more people to attend. The meeting placo will be changed Irom time to time to better accom odate more people. The meeting on "How to Look at a Painting" will be Monday. 8 p.m. In the home of Dr. and Mrn. Boyd Bprague, 830 Paclllo Terrace. HEMSTITCHING Button holes, alterations, button and buckU covering, relining of leather jackets. FREE PFAFF Demonstration Any Time ' Machines from $17.50 Easy Terms Sewing Machine Service AND EXCHANGE 3218 Shasta Way Baldy's Band $1.00 per person, tax included LAKEVEW WEDDING LAKEVIKW At 81. Patrlck'a church In Lskovlew on September 27, Julia O'l.eary ol New York be came ihe bride ol David T. O'Con nor ol Hummer Lake, Oregon. Rev. ' lumen O'Connor read the aervlce at an altar decorated with gladioli and tlnntaa. Nephewa of Ihr bridegroom, David and Patrick O'Connor, were altur boya. The bride wore i gown ol light blue net and lace over matching atln. The ahoulder length veil of blue waa held In place with a halo ol contrasting blue flower. Hhe car ried a prayer book topped with alngle white orchid end elepha notis. ' Mrn. Patrick O'Leary, ol New York City waa matron ol honor. Ilor gown wax ol navy blue lace over navy antln. Her bouquet was a nonegay ol Ell rosea and bou vnrdln. Michael ' brother of beat man. O'Connor, Lakevlcw, the bridegroom was Die wedding march waa played by I'alrlcla O'Leary, Palaley, ac companying Peggy Hlngleton who bnng "Pent Angellcus," "On this I)n y O' Beautiful Mother" end "Hall Holy Queen." Following Uie ceremony a wed ding brenklant wan held at Hunt er's lodne lor the wedding party and guenta. Mm. Bam B. Start passed the guesl book. Afler a trip through Oregon the couple will be home In bummer Lake where Mr. O'Connor Is en gaged In raising llveatock. Out ol town gueat present for the wedding were Jamea O'Keefle and - ton Michael. Mr. and Mra. Maurlco O'Keelfe. Merrill, Pat rick O'Connor, Klamath Falls, Mr. and Mrn. Jack Lynch and Don Nulnn, Hummer Lake, Mrs and Mra. Jerry O'Leary and lam llv. Mr. and Mrn. Tim Oulnee, Mr. and Mrn. Edward Murphy, Mr. and Mra. Jack O'Leary and lainlly. John O'Leary end Michael Murphy. Palxley and Mini Kalh lecn Blnglelon of Portland. TWKENKRfJ' DELIGHT try tirtite. Your Tweener wants to look grown up I Here s the very dress, Mother I Thst row of buttons Ukes Ihe smartest slant In style this, year, the pocket hss an envelope flat , and those sleeves will be tbe envy of the whole Crowd I Jl Ice In colton, rayon or a soft wool! Pattern 9343 In girls' slr.es I. 8, 10. 13, 14. Slse 10 takes V,, yards 3-lnch; Vi yard contrast. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete. Illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step. 8end THIRTY cents In coins for Ih's pattern to Marian Martin, enre of Herald and News. Pattern Dept.. P.O. Box 8740, Chicago 80, HI. Print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, ZONE, SIZE tftd STYLE NUMBER.1 - Phone 6771 :. Dancing 10 till 2 Rare Stamps Give Raffles $1000,000 By NYD KRONIHII AP Newsfeattlrea NEW YORK, Hull le. In on the loose again. Only this time bis loot Is rare stamps. He strikes with lightning swift ness and his victim are stamp dealers Irom coast lo coast. New York. Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angelen, Cincinnati and Toronto have felt his thieving touch. Police believe these thefts, which have amounted to over tl, 000,000 Uie past lour years according to the Americans Stamp Dealers asso ciation, are the work ol one gang with a stamp expert at the head. Ills methods are the same eacb time, police olllclals explain. WORK OK MAHTKR MINI) Ol course, Unifies, Is exception ally clever. He master-minds the Jobs then assigns the actual duties lo skilled performers. Here's how It's done: A dealer's shop Is watched lor sometime. Perhaps one ol the gang will enter and make Inquiries sbout certain ntsmps. Hometlines he will buy stamps lust lo aee where the moat valuable are locat ed. Then comes lime for the Job. Sunday Is the best day. Stamp deal ers are usually closed that day. The shop Is neatly entered. The most valuable slumps are kept In Uie ssfe so the hirelings, who know Uie layout with their eyes closed, tackle thst Immediately. The 'rip system" of removing doors with orsce ana ou wio uyuaimte maig . ts) la used. 1 Only tbe rare Items are taken. Perhaps Uie multi-colored, pretty looking sumps are right on top. But Ruffles' boys know these are' not the high-priced ones. The rsrlty could be dlrty-looklng, not-so-pretty j little sumps. But the boys know ; what to take. Then they make a hasty departure. I No clue has ever oeen leu. no fingerprints have ever been found. None of the aUmps have been lo cated. What happens to the stamps alter Raffles geu them? Are the rare Items sold fir cash at once? VICTIMS THEORY Evant Kirk ol Uie New vora 8tamp Co.. which was Ihe victim ol a 115,000 robbery In 1MB. has a theory. Kirk believes the stamps are taken to Europe or South Amer ica, mere they are exenangea tor raw materials which In turn are sent back to the U.S. Bays Kirk: "They (the eulpnui wouldn'lr dare sell the sUmps In this country at feast not for 20 years. The stolen items are puo- llelzed and well Known to every leading stsmp dealer In America. For example, our valuable stamps had special IdentllicaUon marka on the back. (Some dealers place such marks on the back without depreci ation). The crooks must either hold onto the Issues for a long time or get rid of them abroad." The police in several cities, post al authorities. Insurance detecUves and the American SUmp Dealers association are cooperating to crack down, on these philatelic thieves. But Raffles Is nowhere to be found. Neither are the sumps. Daughter Born To Capt. Mishauds In Ontario, Canada From Ontario. Canada, comes interesting news to the R. A. La Londes. 623 Upham, that their three grandsons finally have a new bxby sister. This more than wel come addition to the Capt. L. P. Ishaud family has been nam. Hi Mary Anne. Mrs. Mishaud (Jane) Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. LaLonde. Capt. MlshauC, who Is making army his career, is a USAP officer workirm with the Canadian force as a radar Instructor under an officers exchange plan. They went to Canada from Manchester, N.H. In August. The Food and Drug Administra tion warns vacationers not to eat mushrooms they've picked them selves unless there is sure proof that they are the edible kind. Mush room poisoning is too dangerous to take a chance on. HALF PRICE SALE I TUSSY HORMONE CREAM :-V'.sc.i.,.i $050 vi , $5 size Now Jm las Civet skin the glow of youth. Cushions it against sse dryneii. ; Contains 10,000 active natural ' estrogenic hormone units per ounce; a counterpart of the tub uric in young skin. Actually absorbed by Uie skin I Buy mow. CURRIN'S The Friendly Drug Star 9th and Main Phone 4514 t . -! ''"' "1 '-:f'f , tm-, fi i KATHY McALPIN, daugh tcr of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. McAlpin, Beaverton, Ore gon, is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. L. (Ike) Davis long time residents here, and who now live at Worden. Mrs. McAlpin is a KUHS graduate and has many local friends. Olds and King Studios Home Extension News TWO MEETINGS Tro meetings are scheduled this week for home extension units. both October 12. Poe Valley-Olene jncinucrs wjij meet at uie uiene community hall for an sll-day meeting at the Olene community hall lor a demonstration or easier Ironing. The Merrill unit n-IU study mending tips. All of these meet - inns are tor ine oenent 01 any homemaker living In the vicinity. The membership Is not limited lesions snd demonstrations are giv en for the benefit of all Interested women and there Is no charge. Most meetings are for all day and usually a sack lunch Is served at noon. If you are attending for the first time call the home 'demon stration office 81S1 for further In formation. The marble tops of pieces of Victorian furniture chests, com modes, or tables may be cleaned with soap and water. But If there's a rust stain on the marble wash with oxalic acid and then rinse well. STAITIMt OUT A pome om 1 k FILLIH6 IN open - stock dining room .. . Open - stock means you can start with a little now, and add more later. Once more, many Travis Court pieces serve dual purposes one now, and one When your needs , and your wishes change. A buffet i. that works as a dresser, and vice versa ... a china that you can use later as a secretary. Here is true value, os well as true beauty! ' Terms if Desired Kfamatk uxmttine Co. 221 Main JACOBY on Canasta "We have many discussions," writes a Washington. D. C. Ian. "about the legality of using an eighth card in a canasta. We snow that when Uie canasta has been at at a previous turn you can add one or more cards to it. But what happens when you man use whi eignt csras to create the canasta? 'For example I had melded three kings and two Jokers, and Uie pack became frozen. The play er to my right discarded a king, and I hid a pair of kings In my hand. If I take the pile and add these three kings to my meld I create an eight-card canasta. Is thin a legal play?" According to Uie official laws It Is perfectly legal to use more than seven cards in a canasta at any time provided that no more than three wild cards are used. It does not matter whether the eight (or ninth, etc.) card appears st the time the canasta Is made or wheth er It In added at a later turn. 'Ihe play Is legal either way. In the example given by my correspondent. It Is quite all right to pick up the discard pile and add all three kings to the meld. It would be equally correct to do so even If the meld on the uble conuined six cards Instead of only live. On this point, as on so many others, there are some players who prefer to follow a home-made "nile." These players allow only seven cards In a canasta at any lime and under any conditions. In the opinion of all Uie good play ers of my acquaintance, this Is a very poor rule and almost unplay able. If you play the seven-card limit rule. It In harder to meld out. You I can't add cards to your canastas. ; no you must aiscard any extra ; csrds that you happen to draw Moreover, It is dangerous to get t a meld up to the five-card mark I since that gives the opponents a chance to freeze and discard that ina saieiy Like oractlcallv all hnirw.mirf. rules this one makes matters dif ficult for the player who ts trying to run up a big score. Most un skillful canasta players want to play for out on every hand and don't want either side .to have chance for a big score on any single hand. Mind you, nobody can object to home-made rules, they're fine for weak players and for family games. Just remember that they are not really the official rules, and don't let anybody tell you that tbey are. Don't use scouring powder or steel wool on plastic kitchen uten sils since the abrasive action may ! scratch -the plastic surface. Solve your problems with Sold Exclusively at Klamath Furniture Co. The versatile, ever beautiful ... ever popular dining room furniture! "Four Floors of Fine Furniture" Child's Homework Should Be a Shared Experience Br DAVID TAYLOR MARKS AP Newaleatures Writer A child's pride In his growing achievements in school should be shsred with his Mom and Dad. It can be made more meaningful when he knows he han the sympa thetic attention of his parents who give him the opportunity of apply ing what he has learned In home situations. That t why, says Mrs. Elda M. Oenterelcher, teacher In the Ham ilton School, Bethlehem, Pennsyl vania, homework should be more than the extension of school work done In the home. Writing In the "Pennsylvania School Journal," Mrs, Oestereicber says: "The purpose of reading at home is not for you, the parents, to teach Uie child. The presenting of new material In the responsibility of Ihe school. If the 'home' work Jakes the child out of the family circle, If It deprives him of play time with the family, If It prevents his being read to or sharing a family experience, the homework should not be done. Its purpose la sharing ... but if It makes him a person to be listened to with respect as daddy is when he says. 'Mother, have you read this piece in the paper about the club meet ing at Mrs. 's house?" he Is proud of bis skill. When he can relive with his family Peter Rabbit's adventures MARINER'S CLUB. TULELAKE Bettfy and Jim Orr. former residents of Tulelake were I guests at the last meeting of the Mariner s club held at. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Ragland. co-hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. Tilden Osborne. Mr. and Mrs. Orr have been with tbe forest service for some years, recently being located In Hawaii and Alaska. Colored films taken of a recent eruption of Mauna Loa tn the Islands were shown. Films taken by Carolyn Collier in Europe were also shown. Orr has left the service and the young couple s plans for . the winter are indefinite. Menfolks cooked and served the dinner. Burton Hoyle ts chairman of the committee appointed to raise funds for the club's project for uus year. Pre-School Center A Private Day School A.M. Kindergarten or Full Day School ' Visitors Welcome No Obligation " Phone 4279 . - 715 Jefferson I in1 1 1 1 1 1 i ...nmaiim i i ' Choice of Styles n vr i Phone 5353 or 5339 or Alice and Jerrys trip to th farm or Sally's troubles with Spot, your child han new pride. He tw longs to reading America. He Is becoming a family member who New things being learned are Important discoveries to vnunf children, she says. Oone I the any when we got excited In dis covering mat 3 and 2 add up to 6 whether we are adding pennies, cookies, paper, chalk, blocks, etc. Children do make discoveries con stantly and are proud ol therA. Much run Km ttmm ktf iumhU to help children make discoveries in the home or find proof there of the things he has learned In school. "Is he struggling with 4 and ?' asks Mrs. Oesterelcher. "Do you ever have five plates on the shelf snd four on the Uble? Could ho help by bringing you five largo potatoes and lour small ones? "If the homework can help the child see simple numbers in oner allo.t In life, we are giving him reailty In living far beyond what the school can do alone." It Is true homework, she says, If the child Is learning to count, add or subtract, and he hunts five matching buttons or tells you how many -empty coke bottles are In the carrier. Oames which Involve numbers are homework, too. Guessing games while he helps you dry the dishes, or set the table or get the puppy's food ready give a connection between school and home. ' Primary grade children are Just learning to spell. Writing is a new skill and so are letter names. If ihe child can practice writing these words a few times not more than three and say off the letter names to you he Is strengthening his new skill. OUR . . . Personalized Albums ere new m tliiateyt Oresr New ... tar best tafecHM al avoid lest minute limited trscas, PIONEER OFFICE SUPPLY fr-"--.; zl)juxel mmmmmmmimmmmxm'M