Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 21, 1953, Page 16, Image 16

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    HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS OREGON
PAGE SIXTEEN
SELL "DON'T WANTS" WITH A WANT AD ... PHONE 8111
EVERYTHING
FROM
A
TO
z
. A
AUTOMOBILES
B
BEDS
c
CHAIRS
D
DAVENPORTS
E
ELECTRICAL
APPLIANCES
F.
FREEZERS
G
GUNS .
H
HEATERS
I ,
ICE BOXES
J
JEWELRY
K
KIDDIE CARS
L
LAMPS
M
MIXERS
N
NOVELTIES
o
OLD GOLD
P
PETS
Q
QUILTS .
R
REFRIGERATORS
S
STOVES
T
TABLES
U
UTENSILS
V
VACUUM
CLEANERS
W
WINDOWS
X
XYLOPHONES
Y
YACHTS
Z
ZITHERS
CAN BE SOLD
THROUGH
HERALD & NEWS
WANT
ADS
PHONE 81 1 1
Whisky Ration Goes Off In Time For Merry
Britons To Ring in New Year With Good Cheer
Hy ANNK Kit AM ICR
LONDON IA1 Whisky-parched
Britons will be able to ring in
the new year in style. For the
tirst time .since the war's end,
whisky will be off the ration lists.
For eight yeurs most of Britain's
whisky has been exported to earn
dollars. Supplies for home con
sumption were reduced to a mere
trickle.
How, with production boosted,
the government is abandoning the
old austerity program which gave
liquor stores and merchants yearly
quotas based on a small percen
tage of their prewar sales.
A familiar figure, debonair and
monocled and clad in well-cut
tweeds, is returning to national
Don't Tke It for Granted !
TrlE AVEKA&E MAN'- MM?, ,
BOPY CONTAIN? ENOUG-H CA(?80tJ "'fW, "t! '
To MAKE QOpQ. PENCILS f V 'Jf Vm!
4u peces o?MiiiPii Iff C 1 I f If jfe
cahtmakiiu. corns OFV.S. 'JA fMsM '' '
Nswsf'iP60(tffrMomPAi't
-fW flpueertsees iNvgsr moke ap
OOIXARS IN NEW5PAP6RSTHAM IN ANY
OTHER MEDIUM ! 0ONr-rIK,
maga-unes to invito readers to a
"whisky and soda."
And every time a Scotsman sees
the ad his blood pressure will shoot
up at the stupidity of the English
spoiling his national drink With a
fizzy soda substance that destroys
its potency, changes its taste and
"transforms a meilow beatitude
into a gaseous frivolity."
Scotsmen stoutly maintain that
whisky is not to be used lightly
as an ingredient in "a fushionless
clamjamirey o' a cocktail."
The scot will allow a little plain
water or even an ice cube, but
he preiers to drink it neat and
wash it down with a gulp of water.
The water must be fresh, prefer
ably from a stream. Stale water
flattens the whisky and makes it
insipid ("wersh" is the Scots ex
pression.) The Scots are partial to malt
whisky, which they call "uisge
bheatha." That's Gaelic lor waier
.of life.
Until about 60 years ago this
was the only kind. Barley is still
used exclusively in the pot stills
of the Highlands and the Hebrides.
Today grain whisky, made from
cereals in a patent still, runs a
close second to malt but before
it was accepted in Britain there
was a long-drawn-out battle. Con
servative distillers said it wasn't
genuine whisky. It took a royal
commission in 1909 to establish its
right to the name.
For the Scotsman, malt whisky
remains the aristocrat. Savoring
the distinctive flavor it acquires
when the malted barley is spread
on perforated plates to dry over
a slow peat fire, he'll orate on
ihe distinction between malt and
grain while debating the relative
merits of a Speyside or an Islay.
(Speyside whisky is made of High
land malts produced chiefly in the
bpeyside or Glenlivet district. Is
lay whisky has a particularly
strong flavor due to the "peated"
malt.)
Yet, Englishman or Scots con
noisseur, there'll be mighty few
who'll go a whisky spreeing in the
new year. Who can afford to at
34 shillings ($4.76) a bottle?
There'll be many sighing for a
return of the 1850s when the tax
on a bottle was a mere 5 pence
and not the 24 shillings and 1
pence (S3. 44) it is today.
Legal Notice
Blade Market Babies Pose
Big Problem In US; Curb
In Growing Racket 'Must'
WASHINGTON (jW Sen. Hend
rickson (R-NJ said today a New
York City prosecutor's grim tale
of a back market in babies has
shown that a tough federal law
to curb it "is a must."
Hendrickson made the statement
as he called a husband-and-wile
team of criminology students to
testify today in this second day
of public hearings into causes and
possible cures of juvenile delin
quency. He said Dr. and Mrs. Sheldon
Glucck, members of the Harvard
Law School staff, would report
their findings in a study of 500
juvenile delinquents and 500 young
sters of similar backgrounds who
"went straight."
Yesterday the subcommittee
heard Ernest Mitler,' an assistant
district attorney in New York City,
declare state laws no longer are
adequate to combat the reported
baby black market.
Mitler said unwed teen-age
mothers are easy prey for un
scrupulous "vendors" who collect
SI, 000 to $2,000 for a baby. He
said vendors often operate safe
from prosecution in many areas
where state laws do not forbid the
practice.
Mitler appealed to the sub
committee to sponsor federal leg
islation to make interstate "sales"
of babies of felony. Hendrickson
said he thought such a law "is
a must."
Mitler said there are interstate
baby-selling rings operating a long
distance telephone order service
or even, for $500 extra, person
alized "door-to-door service."
Often, he said, babies are bought
from mothers 1,000 miles 'away.
The 'subcommittee heard testi
mony by Dr. Martha M. Eliot,
head of the Federal Children's
Bureau, that 32,000 babies are born
in a single year to unwed girls
17 years of - age or younger.
Frequent long soaks in warmed
oil and buffing as much as 10
minutes a day will help greatly
to strengthen thin, brittle nails.
, II' r- A.sh-' jBS,;
f; t w . . mm
ifife: ilsk MMiiS-B
"My schnozzola is my trademark"
IT doksn't mattkr wliellter lie's
sinning, ljoofing, or jist plain
clowning (hat famous proboscis
(nose to you) tells you that you're
looking at Jimmy Durante and a
great performance.
It's the same iilea when you see a
reliable brand name in one of your
local stores. The maker's brand on
an article tells you exactly what to
e.vpect in value and performance.
It enables you to shop with confi
dence. Manufacturers of recognized
brands constantly strive to give you
the best because, after all, that's
just good business. Competition
with the makers of other brands
stimulates them to keep their stand
ards high, to improve their brands,
nnd to oiler you belter products and
more attractive values. '
The result of this competition?
You benefit, every time you choose
one of the reliable brands you see
advertised in this newspaper. It's
always a good idea to name vour
brand and better your brand of
living.
BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION
INCOR.ORATID
A Xon-Prnfit Eiliu-iitional KoumLuinn
87 Well 37 Street, New York 19, N. Y.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Sale of timber, Klamath Indian
Reservation. Sealed bids In dupli
cate on lorms provided therefore,
marked outside. "Bid Southern Mt.
Scott Fir Unit", addressed to the
Superintendent. Klamath Indian
Agency, Klamath Agency, Oregon,
will be received until 2:00 p.m..
Pacific Standard Time, December
21 1953, for the purchase of tim
ber on six trust allotments coin
prising 880 acres and on tribal
innriK eomDrising 160 acres. Sep'
nmtii noDroved contracts must
be made for timber to be cut on
those allotments and on thn tri-bally-owned
land for which the
authority to sell the timber his
been obtained from the owners.
The unit contains an estimated
stand to be cut, which estimate is
not guaranteed, of approximately
40,300 feet, B.M. of high risk pon
derosa pine. Ho.050 feet B.M. of
sugar pine, and 1, 548, 450 feet B M.
of white fir. Each bidder must
state the price (jer thousand feet
B.M. Scribner Decimal . Log
Scale that will be paid for timber
to be cut and scaled from the unit
as a whole. No bid will be con.-m-eved
for less than t27.50 per thous
and feet B.M. for ponderosa pine,
$22.50 per thousand ret B.M. lor
sugar pine and $4.50 per thousand
runt B.M. for white fir. A certified
check in the amount of 20 percent,
of the total Did price nn a hoi-
ent bank, payime to me ire.iMu
r of the United .States must ae
comnanv each bid. The deposits
will be returned to the unsuccess
ful hiHders. TIB deposit OI ine
iiirwessful bidder will be applied as
part of the purclm price against
timber cut on mi-, ura: tmi.v ui
tnined us linuidatecl damages if
the bidder shall not e:e :ul? all con
tracts and furnish a satistactory
bond for each contract. The
amount of bond required on each
contract will be twenty (201 per
cent of the total bid value of the
respective contract. The right to
waive technical defects and to re
ject anv and all bids is reserved.
The contracts will specify that all
designated timber shall be cut and
removed from the unit on or before
December 31, 1S54, and that all
other requirements of the contract,
including slash disposal, will be
completed by the same date. An
advance payment, in amount of
10 percent of the bid value, will
be required on each individual al
lotment contract. This advance
navment must be made within
thirty days of the approval of tne
respective individual allotment con
tract. The contractor will be re
quired to deck logs in advance of
scaling or to conduct logging oper
ations In such other manner that
will permit the scaling of timber
in as few scaling assignments
as possible. Before bids are sub
mitted, full information concerning
the timber, the conditions of sale,
and the submission of bids, should
be obtained from the Superinten
dent, Klamath Indian Agency,
Klamath Agency, Oregon, or the
Area Director, Indian Service
Building 1, Swan Island, Portland
18, Oregon. Dated this 19th day ol
November, 1953, at Portland, Ore
gon, E. MORGAN PRYSE, Area
Director.
Nov. 21, 28 Dec. 5, 12 No. 713
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed has been appointed Execi'lrix of
the Estate of Emil Mochcttaz. Jr., De
ceased, by the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon for Klamath County,
and has oualificd. All persons hating
claims against said Estate arc notified
to present the same to the undersigned
with proper vouchers at the office of
Wm. Kuykendall. Pine Tree Building.
Klamath Falls, Orepon, within six
months from November 21, 1U53.
Ida Mochettaz
Executrix.
Wm. Kuykendall
Attorney for Executrix
Pine Tree Bldg..
Klamath Falls. Oregon
Nov. 21, 28, Dec. 5, 12 No. 712
One day
Three days
Week Run .
Month run .
.per word So
..per word 12c
..per word 20c
. per word 65c
MINIMUM
The minimum cnarge lor any one
ad Is 60c
DEADLINES
Classified ads accepted , up to 5:30
p.m. for following day's publication,
up to Noon Saturday for Monday,
classified display ads Accepted up
to 12 noon for following day's publi
cation. BOX NUMBERS
Answers to ads may be handled
through box numbers at the paper
for a service charga of 25c
ADJUSTMENT
Please make all claims tor adjust
ments without delay. ,
Corrections or cancellations re
ceived by 5:30 pjn. will be made In
following day's publication, by U
Noon Saturoa.v tor Mommy
A CARDOFIHANKS
WE WISH to thank all of our kind
friends nnd neiennors lor ineir many
kind expressions of sympathy and con
dolence during our recent bereave
ment. Mrs. Dorothy Hermann and fam
ily.
WE WISH to thank all of our kind
friends and neighbors for their many
kind expressions of sympathy and con
dolence during our recent bereave,
nient. Mrs. Elodie Mochcttaz and lam-ily.
, r'UNtRAL HOMES
4 PEftSONile
HAH'RIEfTlCrSrn.T-
rr"NSPITi0rP-
WANTED.
WARD'S Klamath Funeral Home. 92.1
High StreePJlonejj:i34.
1 MEETING NOTICES
ejy 23t. " rq
saleslady
with woi,,an ,.. TTT,
om and Main , ','" ai lii.1
WV by- month fn l!L : T?,
Septic TnrdTrrT--
NEWEST SANrrARv
ROTO n00TERSppw
Cleans Un!
0,0. Ed F' King ,
2434 ORCHARD -p
fiowniiSTiiHr
APPLIANCES
EXPERTLY SERVICm
. AND REPAIRED
Prompt, Efficient tta,'
7th at Klamath
Regular meeting
of Disabled Amer
ican Veterans and
Auxiliary will be
held Friday, Nov.
20, in the K. C.
Hall at 8 p.m.
W. B. BINGHAM
ADJ.
Scottish Rife Fall Reun
ion, Friday, Nov. 20, 1953'
at 8:00 p.in. the 18th de
gree will be conferred.
On Saturday, Nov. 21,
1953, beginning at 10:00
a.m., the 30th and 32nd degrees
will be conferred. Dinner will be
served on Saturday, Nov. 21, 1953,
at 6:30 p.m. There will be a charge
of $1.00 per plate, except to the
candidates.
Herman Gisvold, Secy.
DEGREE of HONOR
meets November 16th
at K.C. Hall at 8 P.M.
PRES.
Bertha Weatherhold
FIN. SEC.
Ruby Bell
LOST AND FOUND
STRAYED FROM Summers Lane
Home, medium size black eoat whh
white markings. Very playful and chil.
dCJisyjjpj;i.Phone7457.
LOST, set of keys, hiaclt ieathcr
case. Phone 3420 or Basil.
4 GENERAL NOTICES-
Corvallis
To Have Grog
PORTLAND (TP) Thvce licenses
to sell liquor by the drink in Cor
vallis were approved Friday by
the Oregon Liquor Control Com
mission. The action came after a long
battle between "dry" and "wet"
forces over six liquor-by-the-drink
applications. The commission
heard both sides at a special hear
ing Thursday.
License approval was given the
Benton Hotel and the Moose ami
Elks clubs. The commission re
jected applications of two taverns
on the ground that they did not
meet requirements. It aid not re
ceive tlie sixth application, from
the Corvallis Hotel.
Commenting on the action, Wil
liam A. S p a n g 1 e r, commission
chairman, said:
"The Commission has adhered
strictly to us poiicy ot noi grain
ing licenses without the favorable
endorsement of local governing
bodies. Now that such endorse
ment has come from Corvallis and
all parties who have requested a
hearing in connection with this
matter have been interviewed, it
is felt there are no legal grounds
for refusal."
Spangler was referring to ap
proval of the license applications
by the Corvallis City Council.
FOR SOCIALLY CORRECT
WEDDING INVITATIONS
& ANNOUNCEMENTS
See
' VOIGHT'S
PIONEER OFFICE SUPPLY
Ask for your FREE COPY of
"WEDDING CUSTOMS"
M n ,y AC for your dam-'os Morgar
"m. V.U11 nil Or 2.IKI1U,
am.
LKT ME dress your doffT-
side work gladl, .,&,
nhoneJMM ''epwa ,
ELKCTltIT7Srkd--i!r?7
v 2-1010 hM..
at reasonable nrice. eL ?
Cnllrcc 7X1 Pine Phnn.
MATrHNITY ?L6fi!r?
MADE TO ORDER
Flint. Plione 2-3057 m
DUCK HUNTERSrb7krKrr"
ants picked, denned and frozen S
ar.vwhcre in U.S. Klamath Cu?
Ice. 1 310 Kin math Ave.
PLOWING DISCiNG5rlS
H t- Jarranl. phone 5352.
WILL PRUNE fnitrJSrcTiuii
C A R PEN TE RING . fnteriwta5
sniilll OSlHm.ltns Ph. 'V '
GOOD HOMEMADE pieTHj"
dor. Plump niiriB
1 2 HE ALT H
JVYANT Niping home. SUiTS
Will care (or partial patAltilci
bod and ambulatory patitnti
2-27B1. Medford. Ore.
13 EDUCATIONAL
BOOKKEEPING office irtflrrfl
Inn. shorthand. Speedwrllini i
subjects. Klamath Buslneii &!
Pino Phone 4fi;o.
YOUNG MEN AND V0MEN
roads need tciefiraph optnte
will pay two thirds training com
bo fooled. Get the facts. No a;
Write fop nnrttcLil.-trs Tnl r
G. St., Modesto, California,
14 HELP WANTED, F EM All
WOMAN pensioner tollve In i
for tun chiliirpn. rail ( t
2-31112.
WANTED Middleaged worsi
light housework by month. Ci
EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES
Chuck Wason Cafe. Sec Mill?.
1 6 HELPWANTED, MALE
NWNDSD-CaTlalHmio
cn opportunity if interested n
Apply Parker Pontiac, 4lhandi
Avenue.
FIELD REPRESENTrVm
AND MANAGER TRAISE
expandiiiR office has nnenint
other man 21 tn 35 years oi
Interested in a permanent cars
si'hoi'.' education iioces5ary.
Mr. Hock, Pacific Industrial Lo
South nth, no phone calli.
17 HELP WANTED
Scheniey Put
On Black List
PORTLAND im The Oregon
mqirai- uomroi commission in
formed Scheniey Distributors, Inc.,
that its whisky and other liqnors
cannot be sold or advertised in
Oregon for 10 days because it
violated an advertising regulation.
The move, first of its kind in
the history of the commission,
followed publication of a Scheniey
ad which previously had been dis
approved by the commission.
Beginning bee. 1, for 10 days,
Scheniey products cannot be sold
or advertised in the state, under
the commission order.
Rough Sea Of
Marrigae Early
LOS ANGELES I Choppy seas
and high winds prevented 92-year-old
George M. Bartlett and Mrs.
Sonja du Pont, his 50-year-old sec
retary, from being married in a
diving bell at Santa Catalina Is
land. So they were married yesterday
at Los Angeles International Airport,
Hit and Run Driver
Offers Apology
ST. LOUIS W Here's the story
of a polite hit-and-run motorist:
"I'm sorry I hit you," the motor
1st told Frank E. Munyak, 30-year-old
St, Louis engineer yesterday.
Munyak said the driver shouted
the apology from his car, then
sped away.
Munyak walked to his own car,
drove home and called police. He
was taken to city hospital and
treated for a bruise on the left leg.
Pine Orders
Showing Gain
PORTLAND m Pine orders
and shipments showed increases
last week over the previous week
but were well below figures for
the same week of 1052, the West
ern Pine Association said Friday.
Orders totaled 70,404,000 board
feet, compared with 60,854,000 the
week before and 74,763,000 the cor
responding week last year. Simi
lar comparisons of shipments were
3,046,000 leet, 72,601,000 feet and
77.296.000 feet.
Last week's production was 77.
310.000 leet, a slight improvement
increase over the previous week.
The association said orders to
date this year are up two per cent
from 1952, shipments increased
three per cent and production six
per cent.
The report covers Idaho White
pine, Ponderosa pine and associ
ated species.
Advertising' Pays,
For Someone .
HOLLYWOOD Ifl Advertising
usually pays, but Miss Bell Brook
found that her ad boomeranged on
her.
She advertised her mink coat
and mink stole. A man answered
yesterday and when she admitted
him into her home he bound her
hands and feet, cut the phone wires
and fled with the two mink pieces,
valued at $2,500.
FAST WORK
LOS ANGELES iPj Two Air
Force F86D Sabre Jets flew
between ,San Francisco and Los
Angeles in a half hour yesterday.
That's the fastest between the
cities, the bet previous being 32
minutes. 56 seconds, set in 1950
by a North American F86 Sabre
Jet.
Salesmen's Dret
Men and women interested i
work this is the opporiun
dream about. A company 6
lng a field with millions tl
to assure your future. Pra
will bo last for those l
qualify. Don't be a dream
miss this! Regardless of 1
are selling, or if you
to got into the selling fleM
tigate. You must be neat
pearance, ambitious and (
automobile. No route rum
collecting. Your earnings sk
$150.00 per week to start,
additional bonus check
month you have been Willi
a short time. Also liberal (
pense account. For detail!
Reed, any day starting M
23rd, Horn 9 a.m. to II '
Drew Building, or Phont
18 SITUATIONS WANTED
WOULD LIKE lo worTojTJj
chine or housework. Hourll v
Phone .iftl!; -
CHILD CARE In my home.
crenccs. Phone 2-UH3.
BABY SITTING day or !'
OT1 enmous. Write Box "
L ryiBi-A-Sl?-"
STENO. Eccretory. Nin.clo,f,lrl
Snee. Available inimedl.ltl).
public relations, sales, local
Phone S.13o. -
WfLL KEEP children In MT
or evemnes. PneJa .
CHILD CAfiE In mrW
nlehl. Reasonable. Phone
Shnstn Way.
ClTiLD"CAEE after 3 p.m.
See me 400Oak.
SapTy SITTING evening .
m-iiiSEWORK BY hour or
4727 .
WILL CARE for children in
Phono 2.1 im
WILL CARE for two OT
home days. Also want Iromo
CHILD CARE. PhonBt
WANTED, WASH1INU
CHILD CARE my home.
dole.
YOUNG MARRIMJ k ,
children desires steady "
Experienced with farm '
lie Dependable, sober. "
A Hums. California;
jsWoPIPhnjSjsS-
HOUR WOjtKP";ne,8S
22 ROOMS FOr! RjNT
ROOMS
$1.50 and UP
REASONABLE RATES
PERMANENT WINTER
KLAMATH H?
125 SO. SIXTH
ItSrBOARDen,,.
clean1Ch:.ejn pnone
ROOMS 03IJI--saS-5
ROOMA.ND BOARD. P"
Lldoraclo. -ifcfemrl
FURNISHED,
roor
irJ5.ne:J"-.?i-jji fit
2APARnNIS
NICtLY !.."i'Wi J-Jippei C
mcnt. Etcrtn5"''J
TilREE ROOM
ment. 1810 LinM-