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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1952)
TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 11)!2 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OKKOON PACK rTVK r ii ll'irn a lliiinr A tint), Ucuiii ftilwnnl, wnn burn al home, mm lay, June Ti, to Mr. nnd Mm. CI. K. HHlrrr Jr., MM OiPinil Htrotl. UniiiilnuiPiili ol 1 1 if rldit pound lull hio Mr. lit id Mm, OnorKo 15. Hnllwr, I'urlliiiiil, mill Mr ulul Mi. A. M. I'rcry, KliiimiUl I'nlU. Women's Krllowalilp of thr Flint Cliibilluii Church will meot Tliura (Iny. Jimn 311, ut 11 a.m. nl tho church. Thcrn will lia n potlui'lt hiiit li l iiihiii with nluily and de votional followlhii. (prn Mwllin Membrr of Nn tloniil SccrHitry Auioclntlon Invito II (iIIIit worker but wren the iitioi i( IB unit Ml who are liiltrtntrjil in tnkltiK the alutly courac thin lull lor cerllf y lute I'rnlrMtonal Herri) tarya In nttrncl the open nieetlna to be held In Commuiilty LouliKe. J'Jt N. BUi turret. The ineellnn will ba held Monday. June 30, nl 1:30 p.m. Ordrra lor hooka wlli bo tnkril m Hint time. I.aat Meetlni Canton Cinler Auxiliary No. 7 will meet Thuraday, June 51) nl I p.m. D8T. Thin will he the lam meetnm belore Hummer vacation. All niemherH me urged to Htlcnd. ItelreiilimeiitH will bo -rved by I, Inn Motichenhnclier. Wf Berk mid Helen linn UN. Northern Sky Sees Fireball II y The Aanoolatrd I'reM A bull ol lliihl drncrlbed In Be. attlr an "hluh.linreon with a red tall" olid In Hpokane aa "white with an edition ol itreciit!ih hut" nlrrnked ai'ioiui tho Wnnliluuton ky Mon day night. A Civil Aeronautic Admlnlnlra lion olllclal at Biwknno au Id the ob ject nliui wnn altililrrt at Yakima and Kllrmburg. Brattle wiuiiwira aald the object pn.mrd over the noulh end ol the city hoadltiK ran. Policeman Sydney jonnaon, tno Ural to reHrl It In Spokane, Bald the bnll "teemed to vanlnh In thin air" alter he had watched It lor 10 or 16 necondH. Air Force official at Spokane aald dncrlptlona ol the object probably ruled out a meteor. Stevenson In Hospital CIHCAOO "W Oov. Adlal E. Slevenaou'a honpilal atay wan ex tended by 24 hourn Tueaday. The Illlnoia governor, who un derwent a minor operation Bunday had expected to leave Panaavanl lioitpltn! lodny. But a apokenman aald the release lime had been postponed to Wcdnrndny. Tn hocpltal reported aievenaon . "coining aloiiB line." ' Bievenaon entered the honpilal Saturday nlKht. A amall atone waa removed trom tile tube between the kldneya and the bladder under local anesthetic. Firemen Make Return Visit City fire equipment had two ralla overnight to the E. W, PloW man residence. The first, early Monday nluht. waa caused bv a flooded oil atove naming up. There waa little dam aire. The second, at 4:64 a.m. Tues. clay, was apparently a continua tion of the first but the fire had eauftht up In the flue and caused damnco to the walls. 23 1ecM Ayo- Monday, June 24, 1929 Mm Bernice Hortenbower of Lo Grande, daughter of R. B. Hortenbower, LaGronde controctor who hoi o contract with the city for constructing o sewer iys , tern, hot occepied a temporary position In the office of Ihe cham ber of commerce. Miss Hortenbower formerly held the position of secretory lo Earl C. Reynolds when he -was in charge of the Lo Gronde chamber of commerce. Tuesday, June 25, 1929 The finol meeting of the Order of DeMolay for the summer wos held at Ihe Mosonlc ho 1 1 lost night. Meritorious service medals were owarded to Robert Eaton, James Hawkins, Joe Evons ond Armond Ulrich. The DeMolay degree wos conferred upon Junior Sloan ond Harold McKeoun. Wodnoidoy, Juno 26, 1929 Mrs. M. E. Nlcodemus ond two children hove arrived here from Spokane, Washington, oinmg Jj Mr. Nlcodemus, teller at Ihe Amorlcan National Bonk. Mr. ond Mrs. Nlcodemus hove token the Gerber home on Fourth and High Slroet where they will reside. Mr. Nlcodemus come here several months ogo from Ihe north where he wos engaged in Ihe bonking business, Thursdoy, Juno 27, 1929 Henry Gerber has returned from o trip around Ihe world, which he started In February, ond plans lo resume his duties ol the American Notional Bank next Mondoy morning. Mr. Gerber stated yesterday that the trip was o won derful experience ond on education In Itself. Fridoy, June 26, 1 929 Announcement of Ihe marriage of Miss Evelyn Propsf daughter of Mr. ond Mrs. Edward Propst of this city lo Lesler Longer, ion of Mr. ond Mrs. A. Longer, prom Inent residents of Siskiyou county, Colif,, at Medford, on Mondoy, June 74, comes as a complete surprise lo their hosts of friends. Mrs. Longer was born ond raised In Klomolh Foils. Mr. Longer Is In charge of the Standard Oil stolion ol Kirk whore the young couple will reside. Seturdoy, June 29, 1929 The cool green lawn of Ihe Jones home on North Seventh was tho selling for a delightful picnic lunch when Miss Martha Jones entertained for Mr and Mrs G R. Rawlins, Misses Dorothy Stevens, Morgoret Cummlngs! Mary Hunt, Ruth Color; Messrs. Neol Scholler, Ed Forgo, Norvol Homilton, Frank Hall, Don Radobaugh, ond Bryont Wlllioms "Iniure With Landry" THE Jlanduf, LIABILITY V. T. Johnson John A. McColl D. L. Thomas "" PROPERTY 'AUTO 419 Main Street Phone 2 - Dance -Uo-81-Do square and folk daiiclnii club will hold a dance, Wednenday, June 26, al 1 p.m. Weather permlttlnii the dance will be held outside al lha new Mobil service atntlon at the corner of Ulna nnd H. Dili Mi net, otherwise II will be held nl Fulrvlew School. Regular Meetlni will be held by Hojuurnors, Wedueadny, June !I6, at 13:30 p.m. There will be a no huntesn luncheon In the I'aul Bun yan Hooin at Wlllard Hotel. The business ineetlnii will begin al 1:4ft p.m. and will be followed by a sociitl hour. Newcomers to Klam ath Palls are welcome. For more Information call Amea Cook. 3376. Further Treatment Mr. and Mrs. Ueoriie Pullcrton. WW Main Blrrel, have taken their son David to I'ortlund 'for further medical treatment. Mr. Fullertou la a'u dent a I OTI. Home from (amp Alice Mo Kendrre, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hcolt W. McKendrce. 1803 Del Mor0 returned Monday, June 33. from tho Kplnroial Ancenslun summer school which was held In Cove. Returned to Hohool Jody Bennel, diiiiKhter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hennel, 1143 Crescent Avenue, nan returned to the University of Mlchl unn where she la doing gradual! work. Attended Convention Barbara flwansnn. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Bwanaon. 1040 Melrose, and Jane Tlngley, daughter ol Mr. and Mm. W. 1. Tlngley, 1016 Pacific Terrace, have returned from a Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. youth con ference In Hraback. Wash. Both girls are students al the University ol Oregon. Varallonlni Mr. and Mra. L. C. Charlton. Huntington Park, Call!., are spending a vacation In Klam ath Fnlls with Mra. Chnrllon'o aunt Mrs. C. II Wells. 341 Hlllnlde. The Charlton first visited here In 1937 when they were guests of E. II. Ilnrrlman al llarrlmnn Lodge. Mr. Chnrltun la a retired (Southern Pa cific employe. Traveling Connie, Bhlrley and Kay Johnston, daughtrra ol Mr. and Mrs R. A. Johnston, Keno Roule. lelt Monday. June 23. lor the East. Kay, a Junior at OBC. will attend a Chi Omega convention at While 8ulphur Springs. West Va. Connie and Shirley will ipend their vacation near Montreal. Can ada, where their grandmother Uvea. Kay will meet her younger sistera after the convention and they will return home through Canada. Surprise Parly waa given Mon day. June 33. at the home of Mr. and Mra. A. M. Collier. Pine Orove. for Oeorge , droves' seventieth birthday. Preireaslre Dinner Carnation Club will aponsor a proRreaslve din ner Trlday. June 31. For more In formation call Margaret Zlrkler, 3-3062. Moose Lodge will entertain at a birthday parly Thursday night lor members, having birthdays In May. Dinner? by reservation only will be served at 7:30 p.m. followed by the business meeting and pro gram. Bert Rohu fishing and hunt ing authority will give a demon stration and lecture on spinning reel casting. For reservation phone 8464. Visitors Mr. and Mra. William A. Keesee and children. Tokatee Falls, were weekend visitors at the home of relatives and friends. Kee see. former California-Oregon Pow er Co., employ here haa accepted a position on the Tokatee project. Meeting The Mt. l.Skl Ladle aid will meet Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the home ol Mr. Don Johnson on Tlngley Lane. Ga. FIRE 2526 Poul O, Landry jr. . . ' . i w .' , .7.. ' . 'i '"7-' t ,. : S I -i i-'7'-'V7'V. A-3C JOHN W. LENTZ, ion of Mr. and Mr. Robert Lent:, Klamath Falli, hat completed batic training in the Air Force and it now ttudying mechanic! at Amarillo Air Force Bate, Texas. Paving Bids Said Too High Bids on various local street pav ing Jobs received by the City Coun cil Innt week arc to be held up un 1 til tile properly owner along the street involve.1 ho have to pay ! the com have a chnncc lo signify I whether they wnnt the work to go i on. ' 'Hie action holding up the street i Jobs came Monday night when sev i cral resldcnus of Culllornla Avc- nue apiwnrcd bi-lnre the City Coun- ell lo protest K-ttlng the Job of lln- Islilug the one Inne ol California ! between Upliain and Delta now un- finished. ! They declared the bid were high er than the estimated cost ol the Job, nnd asked II lurlhcr bids could be called. A csll lor more,, bid would be Impractical now, member ol the Council decided, altice Ihrce Urms already hnd bid on that particular Job and their bids made public. A further csll lor bids would be the same an exponlng the hole card of the firms which have al ready bid. Asphalt Paving Company of Klamath Falls was low bidder on all live paving Jobs, as well as on some 161,000 worth of city street patching. Members ol the Council are lo contact property owners along the streets Involved California, Paint er. Lawrence. Pleasant and Low ell to see whether the low bids rcr celved should be accepted. The Council accepted several bids lor materials and services lor the coming lineal year, including thst ol Mm. Winnie Hoak lor feed ing prisoners, Bhoop and Bchulze lor tire and tuben, J. Paul Mal thewa tor audit. Signal Oil Com pany for gasoline "and Shell Oil Company Sat lubricating and fuel oil. A dozen building permit totaling 13.431 were approved. fc wrr1 ' t ARYTll-IXOTI imOIRWtrOD't Pfcari ferrte. v 111 IMwm4 el 'Fiona 4llt SAVE NOW ON OUR BIG KEEP-COOL SPECIAL! SUM PITS ALL THISE MAKES OC CARS Pontine 1949-1952 Chevrolet 1949-1952 Oldimobile 1949-1952 $ ISKTAllID AND PAIHTfe TO MATCH rOMCAII Parker -Pontiac Co. Korean War Two Years Old Action Starting to Pick Up By JIM BKCKF.R BKOUL. Korea W Russian- built tanks rumbled aouthward ac ross Parallel 38 In the pre-dawn darkness two years ago Wednes day and plunged Korea Into a bloody, bluer war that has become a alalcmate. The naked aggression against the United Nations-sponsored Re public of (Southl Korea by the Soviet Union's puppet North "Ko rnnn Peoples Republic" began a destructive, sen-saw struggle that has left this Asiatic Peninsula lo ruins. Eighteen members of the United Nations and hordes ol Chinese Com munists have become Involved in the war that has produced no win ner. Casualties total more than two million. More than 10 million civilians are homeless. U. N. troops have suffered 410, 468 casualties, mostly South Kor eans, but Including 109.811 Ameri cans. The Chinese and North Kor ean Red killed, wounded or cap tured are reckoned at 1.623,404. And now the conflict Is almost where It began. Powerful land armies have remained more or lens stable, tor nearly a year, along a line stretching diagonally northeastward from a few mile south of Parallel 38 In West Korea. Until only a lew days ago, both sides seemed awaiting the outcome of Ihe nlmost ycnr-old unproduc tive armistice talk at Panmun Jom. However, as the war's second anniversary drew near. Allied tanks and Infantry were putting pressure on the Chinese In West ern Korea and North Korea's vilal Hitchcock Speaks At Conference State Senator Phil Hitchcock of Klumath Falls was one of the fea tured speakers Monday al the Ore gon Prenbylertan Synod's 62nd An nual conlercnce, held tills year In Portland. Hitchcock was preceded on the spenkcr's rostrum by the Rev. Luther M. Dimmit ol the Church Board ol National Missions In New York. The conference elected the Rev. Morris H. Roach ol Roseburg as the new moderator ol the Oregon Prenbvterlsn 8ynod. He succeeds the Rev. Paul S. Wright of Port land. Why The Tenth Geo N. Taylor Of old. O0d' Chosen People gave one-tenth ol their fruits, veg etables and money-gain Into the Lord treasury. Then came Christ who pointed to the poor widow who poured in her last penny. 11 She gave more than they all, said Christ. Many of the Lord's people to r day give a tenth, but Christ gave HI All. Tor ever ni ever. He was Ood. But In the .'ullncss of time Ceo. N. Taylor stripped olf HI Olory. took human birth, proved Himself to be Ood by rais ing the dead to life. Then He stepped Into our shoes, took our sins and Ood the Father counted Him a sinner In our place. Christ has once for ill suffered for sins, the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to Ood. 1st Peter 3:18. For Ood so loved you that If you should believe on Him. you should not perish but have eternal life. An Oregon lumberman would have you know all over again, how Ood save Mr. Respectable as well as down-and-outers. NOW ONLY 21 50 5pedl anvini nn driving mmfbrtl ThU hunthomt top-quality viaor puts you in th hadt, reduces annoying tun gltrp, artuatlr kep car much cooler. Beautifully chroma trimmed . . aturdtly mounted! ISES hvdro-electrtc plants were smash' ed In a mass air striae. A U. S. Defense Department ol llclal In Washington aald the mili tary action seemed to be "the bent way ol breaking the deadlock at Panmunjom. . ." The Allied troops, the bulk ol Sen Qalhourii MIRRORS Ut far any fm In tbt fevmat Model NH8H REFRIGERATOR- HOME FREEZER ; COMBINATION LrMMan rnLJ i , , Navar balora tifcb aioea ml i -rgaBaH-' I J 1Mb 0 fow prfca 1 'Mt'JWWI I - I ,lt borne freezer that fekTlfLj5??l ' I I ' bolds up to 53 lbs of froi- WrfJoXiiiL I cn 'ood and a BIG rc- j frigtrator that never needs lif I'oMn BP Mfaaa"r " "'V. I FYOCK' IMMON' ma Combining SIMMON'S SIMMON'S SIMMON'S With...HAFTER'S LOW, A price concession from Simmons for this event only . . . enables us to offer these famous mattresss at these TERRIFIC LOW PRICES! . SIMMON'S 'CHARM-REST' This sturdy outer roll mat tress hat 220 famous Sim mon's resilient coils. Fea tures felt and sisal uphol sterinq. In attractive tan stripe. Matching box spring $29.88. SIMMON'S With the famous Sim mon's prebuilt" border. Has cord handles, hun dreds of coils. Fine felt upholsterinq. In attractive green tick. Matching box spring $37.88. Full BUY NOW Corner 9th and Klamath Ihem American, have slogged through Ihe dar days of retreat down Heartbreak Highway, made a thrilling stand behind the thinly manned Pusan perimeter In South east Korea and charged back up the peninsula to the Yalu River Boundary ol Manchuria. There, In late October of I960, Chinese Communist Intervention sent the Allied divisions reeling back on the brink of disastrous AN EASY WAY TO HAVE A PIANO Va tn rent s Uvllr nw iplnat rim Ifm lb J.ouU B. Minn Flan :m pinr, 12 N. lib. Rl a lw msnlhlr rait. Altar a raaaanable lima ran can. If MB wib, changa trom rant ta par rhaaa acraamant. Tba rant alraady pal la all erafltaO ta rear parrbaaa acaawal ana! aa atbar Sawn parmant la aacaa aarr. Tba manlblr parmanlf raa ba litlla blfhar tban rant. Or If raa era tar, raa can cantlnaa la raai. 'MANHATTAN' 3 1Z or Twin Sixe. ... and SAVE! n IV o 7 Hynffiffiffi I . iorcd credit deteat only a week after victory seemed within gra&p. But the Allies, regrouped and Imbued with new spirit, fought back from south of Parallel 38, smashed two mammoth Chinese offensives in April and May of 1951 and were bristling with muscle nn loday-find GieerfvasflsAdme'' rati f OLD B Sunnv Brook BRAND, KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY86 PROOF 65 GRAIN'NEUTRAL SPIRITS THE OLD SUNNY BROOK C0., LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY QUALITY COMFORT REPUTATION LOW PRICES ! a . aaa- .. m Phon. 4878 when the Rctls through ( Russian spokesman, Jacob Malik hintl they would like to talk truce. - Many observer expressed, be lief the Reds agreed to talk, be ginning July 10, IBM, only so thrv could build up their shattered armies. out why it ' s a- II r -a" Va v Ot. 4th and Klamath Phone. 8164