Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 02, 1952, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    WEDNESDAY, .JANUARY 2, 10!2
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE THRES
Hot Stove Causes
Minor Fire Damage
Fire mound nil apparently loo
lint nIovo plpo damaged u wall In
tint 11. P. Aktua home, Ml N. loth
, liifit nlghl, .
city firemen wore culled tit 9.40
THE TODDS '
"Conine Cul-Upi"
WALLY BLAKE
"Th. Gloom Cru.h.f"
TRUDY O'SHEA
"Mill TwInklfTo.i"
.KAY MACK
"Sl Swing"
(W
i".
&r G0DDARDARMENDAR1Z
I
2 TOP
HITS I
ft WW GRMIR 1
1 Mm lVNFfRS
: In
YOURSELF
TUIS If TW SHtpt
U.S. Helping To Train
Chiang's Forces, But
Laws Block Use of Army
4. W7'
r ' Sr.! .-1 '
k"
RETURNED to Lowry Field.
Denver, CoUi,, after spend
ing the holidays with his
parents, Mr. and Mis.
Charles Thurman, 3307
llilyard, is Lt. Charles R.
Thurmnn. An instructor in
auditing in the Air Force
Training C o m m a n d. LI.
Thurmnn is a 1940 graduate
of KUHS and also of Ore
gon State College where he
majored in business and
technology.
I
II
IClP
HIT "2 KXPkQOtS
c7 ruwmji
'Jv TtiiitCM
135
Postal Limits
in Effect Now
Kflecltve yrslerdny. Jan. 1. par
cel po.l mulling mailer to bo sent
llirouiih the U.S. mulls has been
reduced In lc nd weilit by Con
Krettalonul ucl.
According to Pojtniiuilcr Chet
I.miKsli-i. purceU orlKlinitlng nt
llit clniui poriuifllces and nd
dieucd to other first dims pojl
ollli rn ura limited to 72 liirhen In
IciiKih unci Kirtli. nnd 40 ounds In
weiuht II niitllcd to tha llr.it or
secoiut znnrn.
The welKht l limited to 20
poundii II the parcel Is destined
wlihm the third nnd eiuht one.
'there Hie Mime exceptions to
ihenc rules, the Postmaster re
jiorttd.
He noted that the U.S. Postal
Dept. did not Initiate or advocate
Die new postal mailliiR laws.
ColdCiaims
Fourth Life
VANCOUVER, B. C. Wl Brit
ish Colinnlilu's prnlonited cold wave
claimed lis lourlh victim Tuesdiiy.
Itnyal Ciiniullan Mounted Police
said Dm body o( nn unldentllled
iniiii was round In the snow near
White Rock, 30 miles south ot here.
Earlier victims of tho cold wave
which spread ncross the province
Christmas Evo Included a woman
lror.cn lo death near Williams Lake
In Ihe Cariboo, an elderlv man
found fror.ru at Waldo, near the
Aluerta boundary, and a man found
dead near his home at Yale Creek,
lao miles east ol here. .
WAflHINOTON, (Pi-The United
Btates Is helpline build up Chinese
Nationalist forces on Kormosa
with tho Idea Unit some doy they
may play an Important role, In
Asia.
Until there Is a break In the
Korean crisis or a shift of present
American policy, hnwnvor, an ad
ministration roadblock stands In
Ihe wav of any plan to use Chiang
Kal-shnk'a UM0,600-man army In
any attack on the Communist held
mainland. ,
This restatement of U. S. policy
came from diplomatic authorities
Plane Death
Suits Filed
SAN FRANCISCO ij The wid
ows of Kour Portland men who
were killed In a Cultl-irnla airplane
crush have sued United Airlines
lor (1,450.000.
The men were nmonR 0 per
sons killed Auk. 24 when . an air
hncr crw.hcd near Dccoto, Alame
da County, Their widows charge
In the suit that the plane was op
erated recklessly and was flying
below the minimum altitude pre
scribed by tho CAA.
The women who tiled the suits
on behalf of themselves and their
children are:
Mrs. Rdlth M. Johnson and her
two children, (400,000. lor tiie
den ill of Ernest K. Johnson.
Mrs. Ruth Robertson Johnson
and two children, (350.000, lor the
death of Dean Johnson.
Mrs. Lucy R. Van and three
children, (500,000, lor the death ol
Eric P. Van.
Mrs. Lillian L. Petrle, and four
children, (200.000, lor the death of
Robert T. Petrle.
Tuesday after MaJ. Clen. William
C. Chime spoke out on the possi
bility of a U.B.-Natlonallst mili
tary "team" In action outside For
mosa. Chase, who Is head of the Ameri
can Military Advisory group in
the Inland, called In a New Year
statement for closer cooperation
between the mission and Oeneral
Isslmo Chiang's forces. He wanted
in make sure that the 'team' Is
ready for whatever action Is called
for whether It be on this Island
or In other troubled areas."
With out challenging this sugges
tion of possible future "action" by
Nationalist and American forces,
officials here told a reporter:
1. President Truman's order of
June 27, 150 neutralizing Formosa
for the duration of the Korean
struggle remolns In force un
changed. 2. Chiang's proposal to contri
bute some 33,000 Nationalist troops
to tho U.N. lorces In Korea has
become a stale Issue. Gen. Douglas
MacArthur turned the offer down
when it was made soon alter the
Hurt of the Korean fighting. It
could, of course, be rencwea anu
accepted by Ocn. Matthew B.
Rldgwav, but there has been no
evidence ol anything like thlB.
Mother Gets
Draft Notice
CHICAOO. P Mrs. Joe Willie
Riley, a Gold Stor mother who was
classified 1A by a draft board last
spring, has been ordered to report
at an Induction station next Mon
day. Mrs. Riley, who describes her
self as middle-aged, says she will
report. But she doubts that she Is
si rong enough to be a very good
soldier.
"I don't believe I'm In danger of
i being drafted." she said. "But I'M
jHKADY IF THEY WANT ME!1
Mrs. Riley said she had re
ceived frequent notices from a
south side draft board but she re
turned all except the latest or
dering her to report at an Induc
tion station. She said she had
called the draft board and said lt
was all a mistake after she re
ceived her first notice from the
draft board more than a year ago.
Charles W. Tripp, chairman of
the daft, board which sent Ihe In
duction notice, said he was In
vostlgullnc Mrs, Riley's case.
Singapore Vice,
Cost Rises
SINGAPORE I.H The cost ol
vice Is Increasing In Slngaiiorc.
Young girls and women arc going
up In price on the market.
Racketeers are paving as high
. 1,11 f.UU lN Mil: t-iiii.ii; ui n '
vrar-old girl lor nrnsliliition pur-
pones. Plenty of easy money nnd
the soaring cost of living here re
sulted In Increased sales ol women
by poorer families.
"Wc cannot wipe out prostitution,
said an anll-vlce officer, "but we
can make things difficult for Ihe
operators." There have been many
cases ol girls under 18 used for
prostitution. Reports tell of 14 nnd
even 7-ycar-old girls found In broth
els. They hud been sold Into prostitution.
Youngster On
Visit To Ike
SUPREME ALLIED HEAD.
QUARTERS IN EUROPE t
Klevcn-year old 8icphen West of
jDnllos. Tex., visited General El
senhower's headquarters Wednes
day but failed to get an appoint
jment with his Idol, the general.
I Young West, and his mother. Mrs
E. A. Adams, drove to headqunr
jlcrs with a newspaper photograph
'er. They were told the general was
I tied up with other appointments
for the day.
Stephen got a visit to Paris as a
Christmas present when he ex
pressed a wish to visit General El
senhower and find out if the gen
eral would be a candidate (or Pres
ident. He arrived bv air last week
I end wearing 'i like Ike" cam
Ipalgn buttons.
King Honors
War Officials
LONDON W Four members
of Winston' Churchill's wartime
cabinet were made Viscounts Tues
day by King George VI in his
traditional New Year's honors list.
Honoring hundreds ol British and
Smmr.nu.nllh rlli7enS for Iheir
service, the King's Palm fell upon
scientists, two ol nis doctors, pnuu
who signs the Monarch's checks,
daughters overseas, the man wltn
the longest unbroken service in Lie
House of Commons, and the man
who signs the Monarch's checks.
The lour new Viscounts are
Robert S. Hudson, war-time minis
ter of agriculture; St. John Ander
son, chairman of the port of Lon
don authority who was chancellor
of the exchequer 1943-45: Sir Archl
tlme RAP as air minister, and
Ham H. Oohn, who Joined the
Brendan Bracken, publisher of the
Influential "Financial Times" who
was minister of Information 1941-45.
Gunman Shot
By Police
REDWOOD CITY. Calif.-l.fi
A gunman who wounded a police
man alter stealing two cabs was
killed Tuesday In a pre-dawn run.
nlng gun battle along Buysiiore
Highway.
The dead man was identllied as
Reed Butler. 28. of nearby Menlo
Park. Menlo police sold he had
convictions of assault with a dead
ly weapon nnd burglary. Butler
was killed by Reserve Olllccr Wil
liam H. Golln. who Joined tho
Belmont force only two days ago.
Menlo Police Olllcer Daniel D.
Harris, 27, was shot in the hand
and Uilgh by Butler but was re
ported In good condition. His quick
alarm put police on Butler trail.
Building
Cost Goes
Over 1950
WASHINGTON I The nation's
building In 1951 kept pace with the
year belore, according to tj(e irov
ernment, but the cost nearly 30
billion dollars was 7 per cent high
er and volume Is falling oil.
A year-end report, by the Labor
Department's Bureau of Labor Sta
tistics nnd the Commerce Depart
ment's Building Materials Division,
was Issued Tucsdov,
It snld the year's total of (29.
813,000.000 for all new construction
marked a 7 per cent Increase over
1950. The total Included more than
a billion for new military facilities,
nearly six times as much as 1960,
and 880 million! for atomic energy
and defense plant construction, lour
times more.
"Despite larger dollar outlays In
1951 the Joint report said, "the
physical volume of new construc
tion put In place did not rise over
1950 levels. The additional dollars
spent were absorbed by higher con
struction costs."
The report said construction be
gan to slow In the last half of 1951,
compared with record levels of the
preceding 18 months. Materials
Miortagcs and restrictions on pri
vate budding were cited as causes.
"Indications are that these fac
tors will continue to have a de-
Dressing ellect on the total volume !
ol new construction In 1852," the i
report said. j
Eastern Star
Meet Slated
Regular merlin; ol Cascade
Crest Chapter OES, will be tonight
at 8 p.m. In the Methodist church
building in Chtloquin.
Theie will also be Installation of
new ollicers. Those to be Installed
ure: Eva Cook, Worthy Matron,
Harold Wing, Worthy Patron. Donls
Hidenour. Associate Matron,
Dwight Kirchcr. Associate Patron,
Ethel Zimmerman, Secretary, Ruth
Mercer. Treasurer. Wanda Pes
cott. Conductress, Rosalce Hoback,
Associate Conductress. Elizabeth
Zeller, Chaplain, Sadve Pe.ge, Mar
shal. Athel Roscr, Organist. Doris
K'rcher, Adah, Georgia Page. Ruth
Audrev Kcllison. Esther, Helen
Wing. Martha, Marie Hale. Electa,
Mary Nordal. Warder and Gene
Fage. Sentinel.
Installation will be an open meet
ing, and will begin at 9 p. m.
Blood Donors
Get Good Break
SAN PEDRO. Calif. I Any
one who donates a pint of blood
to a Red Cross blood bank can
get 10 percent off on meat pur
chases at Eddie Krakoffs market
during the month of January.
Krukoft announced his offer Mon
day and said he was making it
out of gratitude for Red Cross
blood he received by transfusion
alter a recent major operation.
Krakolf said a receipt from a
blood bank Is all that's necessary
to get the reduced price.
nim'imiwM aw i i M M'T
wen'.'
OPERATION BIRDFEED FUNDS are being asked of Klam
ath residents by the Izaac Walton League and the Klam
ath Sportsman's Assoc. Here Sportsman's Pres. Virgil Davis
displays a carton and poster, one of many being distributed
to downtown business places for accepting contributions.
The money will be used in furthering the winter feeding
of game birds in this area.
Bird Feeding
Drive Started
Local sportsmen and conserva
tionists have Joined together In
sponsoring a drive for funds In tho
Klamath area to provlds feed lor
local game birds.
The Izunc Walton League and
the Klamath Sportsmen Assoc.
have combined forces In order to
gather funds for the Job. Sports
man Pres. Virgil Davl reported
this year's crop of game birds I
the largest holdover crop In recent
years.
He added, too, that the early and
harder winter was causing aom
trouble among the birds searching
for food.
So far, three tons of grain hav
been donated and purchased for
distribution to feeding stations
throughout tho county, Davis said.
Tulana Farms and Lost River
ranch have been heavy contribu
tors, he said.
HEALTH SPRAY
CALGARY, Alta. I School
trustees are considering using a
germicidal mist sprayed In class
rooms to reduce the risks of Infec
tion during the winter months.
Pure orange flnv
that children like.
Accuracy that Moth
em prefer. Tablets
are ' adult dose.
Buy it today. 29c.
ST.JOSEPH
ASPIRIN
FOR CHHDRER
Norblad Ruins
Film Scene
WASHINGTON, (JPt Rep. Walter
Norblad R.-Ore. ruined a scene
being filmed for a movie at the
Capitol Monday.
Van Johnson, star of the film,
was talking to Louis Calhern, an
other actor, during the iilmlng o!
the scene for "Mr. Congressman."
As the filming got underway.
Norblad came sauntering through
Statuary Hall.
'He didn't get In the camera's
range, but the nail-studded leather
heels on his shoes clicked so loudly
that the sound was picked up by
the sound camera. The scene had
to be re-shot.
iifillllli
Wmre tender
wP(more delicious)
N Vmacaroni J
One Call Gets Them All!
One cM to CONSOLIDATED
FREIGHTWAYS oeti you all tho
services you need to solva your
transportation problems.
Of offers COMMERCIAL AND
HOUSEHOLD GOODS STORAGE,
LOCAL CARTAGE, POOL CAR
DISTRIBUTION, HEAVY HAUL
ING SERVICE. LOCAL AND
LONG DISTANCE MOVING in
all major Western distribution
centers plus fast, dependable
MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE to
mora than 900 important points
from tha Great Lakes to tho
Pacific Coast.
RIGHT NOW ,
we have
1,000 sq. ft.
of WAREHOUSE
- SPACE
for vou at . . .
KLAMATH FALLS
call 4151
today!
KLAMATH FALLS TERMINAL: 645 Broad Sr.
OFFERING
TOLEDO. O. Ofi Catholic war
veterans of the U.S. will present
Pope Pius XII next week a spirit
ual bouquet of 350.000 offerings
pledges of prayers and devotions.
The presentat'on will be made
by Donald J. Mc Quake of Swan
ton. O.. national commander, in
a private audience with the Pope.
Expert
Gun Repairing
and Rebluinq
THE GUN STORE
HURRY! THIS EVENT ENDS SATURD A Y
HONEYSUCKLE FLANNEL
Our best quality honeysuckle diaper in
soft absorbent white flannel. Full 27 x 27
inch size. One dozen package. Rep. 2.91.
HONEYSUCKLE BIRDSEYE
A buy in Sears best quality Honeysuckle
. Birdseye cloth. 27x27 inch size. Regularly
j priced at 2,96 a dozen.
CLEARANCE !
White Cotton. Union Suits
Sizes 2 to 6
Regular 98c
9
( DOZEN lmf
Store Hours 9 a.m. to 530 p.m.
133 So. 8th Phone 5188
ANOTHER GREAT LAPOINTE'S
tos Ii
Joyce
Penaljo
School Shoes
Debs
Floutfs
All Colors
All Types
FORMERLY PRICED TO 11.95
De Liso Deb
Hill & Dale
Kimel
Red Cross
Arch
Preserver
All Heel
Heights
All New Shoes
FORMERLY PRICED T0 18.95
Red Cross
Fern
Sample Shoes
Ail Types
Terrific
Values
Many Other
Makes
FORMERLY PRICED TO 16.95
J7
SPECIAL PURCHASE!
100 Pair
Goodrich
WHITE
GALOSHES
. r
Zipper Style
Mid Heels
Over 50
Off
FORMERLY PRICED TO 5.95
SHOE SALON