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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1954)
SATURDAY, AUGUST 28. lftju HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH 'FALLS, OREGON PAGE FOUR ' FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS editor Managing Editor Entered u second cjas matter at the port office at Klamath Fall, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress. March t, 1878 MEMBtft OP THE ASSOCIATED FKtSS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use lor publication of all local news printed In this newspaper aa well as all AP newa SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' MAIL 1 Month 6 Months 1 Vear f I 35 t 6.50 . S11.00 BY CARRIER 1 Month , I 1 SS 6 Months S S.10 1 Year $18 20 ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL by KEN McCLEOD Juan Perez becomes the next! 4-5. On the 15th a junta of offl Spanish name to follow Vizcanioj ctr5 made the decision to seek a in exploring the Klamath coast' port or water being then In Latt thouugh 170 years had to Inpse be- tt.de 51 decrees 42 minute. For (ween Vlzcanlo's voyage in 1603 and 1 u:e ncxt three days, having fol Peres m 1774. A new transport lowed the coast to latitude 55 oe named the "Santiago" had been ( grees. Perez tried in vain to round constructed expressly for the Call-; a point In that latitude. It is clear fornia service was considered the Ciat Perez struck Queen Charlott; best vessel for the purpose. Juan j j. land, and followed it up to 115 Perez was the ofliccr who In the, northern point. Cape North, which late expeditions hr.d br;n the first, he, called Point Santa Margarita, lo reach San Diego and Monterey. The sLrong currents running out The "Santiago" was equipped 0f the great gull or strait which with a year's supplies and Perez he did not nnmc, but which l was given an order on the pre-' now Dixon Entrance, prevented his j They'll Do It Every Time" By Jimmy Hatlo I rWfll.i- 7 MVBoyoPFJUE V FIFTEEN! KIDS OH THE J MOJSTVlOSE MIS3NS3 WHOJ J I TEAM VOUONlV H SQUAD-TWAT MAKES TUEy NEeOEO HELP TO 4 put him w ome V THLvry paremts ns- -itOrasAsiize the team-J 7 THATANiy WAVTO J WITH- ty KOTHIK& OP ' FHE COACH HAD last.. ) TEACH SPORTSMAM- J Y AUNTS .UNCLES VBCTTER UKDRESS U wl J SHIP? IS WIMHN& V B-8UT,-MR.AH'eRANDRAWS I TVE tfo ,R,eHT J wl V TWECNLVTHIKk3 A SvvXEIWN-JWHO ALLTAUSHT 1 mSw; OTHAT ( o3 1 V3UTHIMKOFPV - BABE RUTH AU.J UNIFORM WILL. Qzy WnH i IxHfliA m&? Irs not the kids W J" i " ( ' W IT'S TWE PARENTS Bws ; feTssi-D,; tmmhahoatip T rVfepW "I &t'.7nJ ' V&ffi&lQ TbUOS. SULMAH, sldios for men in case of sick ness he set sail from San Bias on .January 24. 1774. On board hip were several passengers lor California, the returning president. Padre Junipero Scrra, with an other padre and several colonial officials. Monterey was reached on rounding the point. Perez did not land but had much friendly intercourse with the na tives, who came from shore In ccnoes to examine the strange ves sel, they were friendly but only two had courage to board his ship. At one time there were twenty- Ms? th alter having made a brief lth .... h,lnHl.,d ilop at San Diego. natives about the vessel. Thev The Doctor Says TELLING THE EDITOR ages, mats of wool or hair, and ! numb lnd oses it5 CJlot wnen he other native products particularly: oul m le cold awnile what o. mini i.u .iVuuug maue ui;eauses lhj, and u tnere a cure? iron, out carra very lime lor beads and other trinkets. They had missionaries Crespl and Pena to ,' " h . T mce Jears my nusoana s intra ct .. rhjDlalns and keen diaries , V.,. .. , on nls ent nand becomes of the voyaRe. Tile crew of the "Santiago" totaled eighty-eight of ficer and men. After solemn pub lic prayers for tho success of the expedition, Perez set sail from Monterey on June 21. Ilia Instruc tions from the viceroy were to make land wherever he might deem it best and the latitude 60 degrees was set as his goal. From latitude 60, Perez was to follow the coast southward as near as By EDWIN P. JOI'.DAN, M.I). Two correspondents today aik similar questions. L. H- says: "Can you tell rr.e what Is the mat ter with my thumb? It turns blue BnH U'htt dnH ante ,nM anrl cnfi " Mrs n R writes "Fur Ihe Inst " " '" siruciive ana enjoyaoie in tne nis- A RESOLUTION tel for their hospitality, and WHEBE. the 1S54 caption Lf JS? Mi MIC Wlt0W Ull,l, 11KUUUBI Association 01 Postmasters, held at Klamath Falls June 22, 23, and 21 Symptoms .such as the.se are al most undoubtedly the result of poor blood circulation in the respective already e.some few articles of iron and copper. This would Indicate that the Indians' In this area bad had contact with European or Rus sian civilization. As it was Impossible to locate ' a suitable anchorage In this re possible without risk. No aettl--1 8lon or to obtain fresh water, the 'worse. ments were to be made, but theenlner being unfavorable, Perez o The end of my spine has beit places were to be noted; and I CIld nls companions abandoned the been sensitive when I sit for some the commander was to take nos-' attempt to reach a high latitude, time. What do you think is wrong? aesslon of such places for the 0n the "d ( July h headed J.V.P. king, erecting a cross at each' S0Ulfi to follow the coast line. Fog A The lower end of the spine place and burvimr a bcttle withlsnd wlnd provided but fewjis called U.e coccyx and is com- the proper documents. If any for-t! fflinipses of land and would nottmonly referred to as the tail bone eign settlement was found, the for-1 permit the close examination de- tory of the Oregon Chapter, and WHEREAS, the success of this convention is due largely to the effort and cooperation of the fins people of Klamath Falls and Klam ath County, and to our honored guests, now, therefore, ma lily of taking possession must be commenced above It. All such establishments were to be care fully examined, but not Interfered with; neither to the Inhabitants ol aach. places nar to vessels met on the way was the nature of the mission to be divulged; If met be low Monterey. Perez was to say his business was to carry sup plies; if above, that he had been driven out ol hitt coutho by the wind. Perhaps im other voyage vaa.ao well retmrdrd s there arc no less thatu lour distinct diaries In exlatancc. Perea had a slow start by rea aon of calms and adverse winds h drifted south of? the Santa Bar- bars Islands and It was not until the 29th of June lhat favorable winds carried him past the lati tude of Monterey, linen with gen erally favorable winds but with constant fogs, they sailed north far from land, and passed the Jlne of latitude 42 degnees on July sired. For one period of five days no land was aeen and finally on the 7th of August after many ef forts and prayers they approached the coast and anchored in latitude V) degrees 30 minutes, calling their anchorage San Lorenzo which has been Identified as Nootka Sound The Indians came out In their canoes to trade, and were friendly as the Indians further north, they likewise had articles of iron and copper. A strong west wind forced Pere. to abandon the anchorage before he was able to land and rontinued his voyage south, On the 15th and 16th, they were again In latitude 42 degrees but so much troubled with fog they were pre- vr men from searching the Klam ath Coast for Aguilar's river and Cape Blanco, they did note, how ever, that the latitudes recorded by earlier navigators were too high, Perez reached Monterey the 27th of August. HUGH PRUETT Astronomer, Extrusion, Division Oregon Higher Kducatim System Fortunate Indeed is the sky en thusiast who during clcer, moon less August nights linds himself In the open country vdiero the atar-dotted heavens above are not rivaled by the artificial llluminn t'on of towns. And II one has the added advantage ol the elevation of a plateau or a mountnm, the brilliance and multitude ol the stars seem almost unbelievable to 111? average city dweller. While It Is natural to assume that the stars light our way. yet studies by van Rliijn and others In dicate that hardly more than lour per cent of ihe tmln of the niRht sky is from visible stars. Should all these little celestial lamps no dark, wo could stall see our way around and easily distmgush build ings, trees, and persons. Good eyes see hardly more than 3.MW stars under the most favor able conditions. Thnt millions are digits. Both raise '.he possibility ol 1 BE IT RESOLVED, that this con Raynaud's disease, but both pa-1 vention go or. record as express tienta should consult their nhvsl-1 inir thanks and appreciation to ctnns and get accurate diagnoses Host Postmaster Chester Langslet so that the condition If possible na me entire membership o: the can be prevented from getting KJamath Countv group, who so wiuuigty gave tneir time: to tne officials of the City of Klamath Falls and of Klamath County, who have done so much to make us feel welcome In this fine commu nity: to the Klamath Fails Cham ber of Commerce for its coopera lion: to the Klamath Falls Garden Club for the beautiful flowers and inble decorations: to the Klamath Falls Herald and News and to Ra dio Stations KFJI and KFLW for excellent news coverage of the convention: and to the manage ment and staff of the Willard Ho- Resolutions Chairman Sometimes alter Injury or cvzn for no apparent reason it will become painful. Probably the first step Is to have an X-ray tal;en. Q Last Sunday my nineteen-mouth-old baby got a terrific bump from falling out of a church seat. He has had several other falls since he was six months old. Do you think these will alfect him in a few years? . Mrs. C.C. A The little ones are pretty hardy. Any normal, lively young ster is almost sure to have falls and bumps which would put any grownup to bed. 'lhey seem to sui-i And now trouble has come to vive pretty well, but , ot course '. that Eden on the Atlantic, South- James .Mai-low WASHINGTON If Things were pretty tidy when William F. Tomp kins came to Washington last July. His work seemed fairly well cut out for him. Tne Eisenhower adminlst.ation had just made him an assistant attorney general and put him in charge of a brand new section In the Justice Department: the Divi sion of Internal Security. His new Job was to prosecute Commun'sts and subversives in general. He is 41 and not a novice as a protecutor. He's tall, with a lean and friendly face, and an unpom pous manner. Wnen the new Republican ad ministration took over here in 1953 It picked Tompkins he had been a member of the New Jersev Assem blyto be U.S. attorney for all of New Jersey. With a great deal of energy he recruited a stalf to work against racketeers and so impressed the administration it tapped him for bigger things. Ally. Gen. Browntll brought him here. The President nominated him in May and he took office July . The reason his work seemed lalrly well cut out for him .was this: There were then just two main laws on the b03i:s for the government to us? against Communists. It seemed, when Tompkins look over, that all he had to do. so tar as laws went, was to master those two well enough to give the Communists an even greater dose of the miseries. After all. the gov ernment had been using them for years. One was the Smith Act, passed in 1340. Through this one squad of honored guests Hon. J. F. Lynch, Director of Regional Accounting John F. Flxa Postmaster of San ; Communist leaders had been tried, Francisco; the Hon. Paul D. Bent-! convicted and sent to the penlten ley. Inspector In Charge: the Hon. "aT. The other was the McCar- Sam Schwartz, Regional Opera lions Manager- for the Post Olnce Department;" Ed Beaty, United Air Lines; Inspectors J. A. Eidswick end William Andrews: the Hon. Glenn D. Ellison. Civil Service In spector; and J. E. Florey, James Arnsberger and Harold Byran. all ran Interna! Security Act of 1950. The government has been using the McCarran law for four years in an effort to make Communists register. The Communists arc fighting It in the courts. The Su preme Court won't give a final verdict on its constitutionality be- rtf th snclal Tru nsnnrtnl inn Rerv. : fore next Spring. le, fnr th.ir .,kt,. in in- nnn. The Elsenhower administration venllon, and ' through Brownell, long before BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED. ' Tompkins got here, had asked that our appreciation be expressed Congress for a few more laws. t Rev. Galen Onstad, to Rev-Fa-i Not blockbusters. Just a lew laws ther D. P. Meagher, and to Rev. j to tighten up on communism. Wesley F. Crist for their assis- The one thing 'the admtnlstra tance, and to the Area Council Boy Mod. didn't want, at least now, was scouts for their helo, to the Eddie a new act uuuwwh vuiuiiu Rlcci Duo for their outstanding en-; nist party or making membership tertainment. and to the Klamath : in it a crime. Not that the ad- Falls Yacht Club. I ministration wouldn't have wel- Presented and adopted June 24, 1954. Oregon Chapter. NAPUS. Carl Black Secretary Moore Hamilton HAL BOYLE Ihere is no sense in looking lor trouble because onco in a while a youngster can be Injured enough to damage them permanently. No, there Is not much chonee of your baby gelling trouble later from his falls, so far. assuming that he has no signs of injury now, Q what are the causes of boils on Ihe body? L.A. A Bolls are localized areas of Inflammation in and under the skin caused by germs. The germs usually enter through the hnlr fol licles. Any general condition which weakens the resistance of the body diabetes for example In creases .the chances of getting NEW YORK iPi Even Para-ied either as an impossible show dlse has its problem, every heav- off or a tourist, who took the eu Its horror. wrong road. Bills are Daid bv cheque. What can Southampton do to re- as 6577A, the Wave length of the radiation producing it. uut tne northern lights need not i boils. Also they freauenlly follow ia Irediic if it Isn't kept neatly hampton, the long Island Utopia of the . wealthy, where high so ciety gathers in summer to' rest up before facing the ordeal of an other Rrlm winter season Park Ave nueor Palm Beach. Not that Southampton Is any Babylon of the Idle rich. Few of the rich there are Idle, Above the soft wash, of the surf, the sweet twitter of careless birds, rises a steady whispering sound the rustic of scissors clipping off bond coupons. If one pail of scis sors wears out, Uie dowager of financial titan immediately picks up a spare pair and the clipping goes on. What good is a bond or be visible for these spectral lines' injury to the skin, especially to be present. Whenever the sner. Itoscope Is turned toward a clear. oam say. oariA and many fainter rubbing, and tor that reason often a problem to wrestlers. Q My husband and I both auroral lines are there, but In have brown eyes and have a fine wenker Intensity. There is thus always a certain auroral glow In Hie heavens, accounting for about 20 per rent of the light of the inpm sty little blue - eyed boy. We ale proud of the little guy aun It doesn't bother us that his eyes are blue, but we gel a lot of kidding. Would you discuss this? trimmed? This pleasant papery whisper has been characteristic of South hampton for a couple of genera tions. But now a new sound has aiiocn. Noisy newcomers have Invaded the qulety villogc women wear ing Bikini swim suits, men in cover its 4l(inity? Well, a public meeting is planned to discuss im posing an ordinance that would paste a $10 fine on anybody who comes into Ihe village In attire that doesn't cover him properly from the shoulders to a point mid way between the hip and the knoe. Something simply has to be done. The cops have already had to warn one man whose shorts were three inches too high, and woman whose "halter had slipped beyond the danger point." It seems to me that a S10 fine is a pretty feeble solution lo South ampton's embarrassment, and a confession of weakness. It would be better for the dowagers to wear blinders or smoked lorgnettes on their trips to the village, and Ig nore the hoi polloi utterly. Two other possibilities occur: I. Make a real fight of It. Post butlers and gardeners, armed with pikestaffs and clubs, at the en trances to the village and sneer or whack down anyone approach- The remainhia an nr .n. i a '-tt,. in .u. ..'.shorts or bathing trunks. mg who doesn t wear formal dress. due to the rodmcal light, ihat faint inherited according to a pattern The bare sight of all this visit- j These tactics worked well In pre luminescence best seen from our k n o w n as the Mondellan law. epidermis Is more lhan old- v,Jn cen'u. why not again? latitudes in the evening, during the : Brown - eyed pconle frequently ! "'"e Southamplonites can bear. I ., "' ,ow . ",n y examP'e. Let early spring. It cannot be ob-: carry Ihe gone or hereditary char-! "Very unattractive." complained ! ":e Prim dowagers and gentlemen served in the light ol cities noriacter lor blue eves so that It is Mrs. T. Markoe Robertson, moth-; ul ooumampion aon Bikinis and when the moon Is larger than a c o m m o n for brown-eyed par "plumn" crescent. i ents to have blue - eyed children' In the country under a very On the other hand, blue eyes (it clear sky, just as (he final twi-'they are really bluei do not carrv hphl fades from the west, the zo-j genes for brown eyes and all the dlacal light appears as a while' children of blue eved parents will pyramid about as bright as the. also have blue eyes, summer Milky Wav Its broad! Q We have a son emlit years In sight is a poetic exaggeration. oas' 0,1 lne western horizon and old. Is it possible to correct flat Small opcro glasses increase the "lending upwards and narrowing i feel as early as this and how- number almost unbelievably, and' 10 a Point in the high south. ! should we go about it? Mrs. J.M. cr of Angler Biddle Duke. loincloths and parade through Shln- The head of the chamber of com-! nccock H"' other communi- tncree savs orotes'.s against the e- demonstrating that even scant attire worn by these out. landers have come from "all wMks of life" in Southampton. Presumably, this means that even the poorer millionaires are a out raged as the upper clcsses. Who are these invaders who they too. look unattractive when dressed as Mr. and Mrs. Tarzan. They might even take a tip from the late Ring Lardner. Lardner once wrote of how a club of el derly Florida shuffleboard play ers met a similar invasion. The corned It some other time. But right now it might wreck prosecutions being planned under ihe Smith Act and the four years' work already put In on the McCar ran Act. When Tompkins took of fice there was no reason to feel Congress might pass an outlaw bill this year. Talk of It had died down in Congress. On the afternoon of Aug. 12. as Congress ' j-ushed toward adjourn ment, a reporter and Tompkins sat In Tompkins office discussing fhe administration's reasons for not wanting a law flatly banning the Communist party now. Just as the reporter relumed to his own office a bulletin came in from the Capitol. It said the Sen ale had just voted to outlaw the parly. The astonished newsman phoned Tompkins to tell him the news. Tompkins was astonished loo. Neither Tompkins nor the ad ministration had dreamed that af ternoon of what wrfs cooking. Senate Republicans were push ing a measure to hobble Commu nist-infiltrated unions when the Democrats suddenly said in ef fect: "Let's go all the way and outlaw the party." The Republicans, not unmindful that this is an election year, ap parently thought they had no place to go except along with the Democrats. The Justice Department and the administration spent the next week trying to get Congress to tone down the Senate bill, which if it became law in the form first passed by the Senate, might make hash of the Smith and McCarran acts. Congress finally passed and El senhower signed into law. an act which doesn't say the Communist party must cease to exist and which doesn't say It's a crime to be a Communist. Right there Is where the com paratively tidy world Tompkins walked into on July 8 suddenly be- A KLAMATH FLIER, Second Lieufenant Ernest Borden (left) Klamath Falls, and First Lieutenant Frank White, Levittown, Pa congratulate each other after successfully bailing out of their respective F-86 jet fighter planes, following a mid-air collision over Lakewood, N. J August 10. Borden is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Borden, 710 Lowell Street. Pilots Escape Death In Air Two Sabrejet pilots, one a Klam ath Fails man, miraculously es caped death when their planes col lided at about 15,000 feet over Lakewood New Jersey August 10, according to word received by the parents of the local man, Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Borden, 710 Lowell. Second Lieutenant Earnest Bor. den and two other pilots were on a training mission when the two Jets collided In mid-air. Bordca and First Lieutenant Frank White, a Pennsylvania flier, parachuted safely to the ground. Neither man was hurt. The third pilot Lieu tenant Daniel Hunter, Philadelphia, watched his buddies ball out then returned to their home base at Mc Gulre Field, to report the crash. The men were flying F-86 D Sabrejets from McGulre's 5th Fighter Interceptor Squadron. , I, 1 iSilla&Miirlta A" flaunt their unclad abdomens and : oltl ,0ks at th?'r nnual meeting the largest ol tclrt-copes reveal This Is thought to be sunlight A It Is better and easier to I legs so brashly? One member of ! passed " solution raising the hundreds of millions. Hut these 1 "Meeting from a disk of finely correct fla! feet earlv than It lsithe chamber of commerce savs dim stars give lieht even though (l'vl(l,'a material surrounding the; later in hie. The boy should prob-'thev are "Interloperf " from near our eyes cannot dKluiuuish them sun and extending out beyond the ably be under the care of an orth- by low-cost housing projects, such individually. This is amply shown earth's orbit This gives more opedlst who would l;ll him hat as the one at Shinnecock Hills, when lhey are bunched together in ''K'" ' e sky lhan the eye rcc- j kind of shoes to get. perhaps build i who come to Southampton to shop, the Milky Way. u nizes. , up the arch gradually with felt I business may be business, but in It is calculated that four times ! pads or bars, show him how to this case the customer Isn't al as much light Illumines the night i alk, and give any other Insiiuc- wavs right. Not in itaid 8outh- iy nom ine mvisiuie as irom I , 0-s l, lion necessary to bring the lee: ampton. where anybody who dues irom 25 to .10 cents a year "to keep the riffraff out." GET OUR RATES for LAND LEVELING Chiseling and lub-soiling. It Port Drew's Hereford Ranch On Old Midland Rd., Ph. 3924 THE REV. C. O. JACKSON Pastor Named To Fill Post Resident pastor at Weaver Me morial Pilgrim Holiness Church. 2301 Wantland Avenue, is the Rev. C. O. Jackson. The new pastor was culled ear lier Wiis month to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of the Rev. O. D. Weaver on July 6. 1953. The Rev. Weaver founded the i'lamath Falls Pilgrim Holiness Church nnd at the annual election this summer, the name was changed to Weaver Memorial Pil-, grim Holiness Church in his mem ory. This "change of names has been 'received and recorded by the district congress. The Rev. Jackson is a native of Indiana. He completed his minis terial study under the supervision of the Indiana District, Pilgrim Holiness Church, Following his or dination as a minister of that church, he pastored In Indiana for 13 years. In 1951 he accepted the pastor ate of the Hillsboro Pilgrim Holi ness Church In Hillsboro, Texas, which he served until his call to the local church. Recently he has supervised re decoration of the parsonage and Is planning redecoratlon of the church in the near future. Tile Rev. Jackson and his wife, Velma. have two children, Charles, a BT-3 In the Navy sta tioned, at Guam and a daughter, Marilyn, 10, a student at Mills School this year. ix l n i vai7i&n, rercn Found In Lake Although trapping operations have removed some of the cat tish and perch populations from the Tenmile lakes in Coos County, great numbers remain for anglera according to the Oregon State Game Commission. If you are looking for a place to fish for "cats" and perch, you and your family can have a very en joyable time at these well-known lakes. Your own Individual contribu. lion in removing fish from the lakes may not amount to much in terms of reducing the1 over large papulations, but you can en joy the privilege of trying. The problem at Tenmile lakes Is one of reducing the catfish and perch populations in an effort to balance the number of fish with the food supply. Whether or not this can be done remains to be seen. In any event, the fish are there waiting for the anglers, so don't forget Tenmile lakes when you get the urge for some pan sized cat fish and perch. came untidily complicated. He and his staff are still trying to figure j out just what this new law means and how they can use it against: Communists. I AND SIDING $$$ SAVE $$$ Dial witt. the mm whs doet tb work W. S. "BILL HEIMANN Phon ?3M Sift Mitchell V around 2 per cent Is starlight Occasionally the aurora bnrealis illuminates our northern heavens In great splendor. Then it is possi ble to analyze Us light by means of Ihe spectrorcope and break It down Into lines of various Intensi ties and colors. Very prominent is a green line known to scientists Poet's Corner back to normal. shows money in public is regard DAILY yiIFl: TOLTRY y Orpha Col I In He would sit and read his paper And lis worlhlcssncss declare, Jlut i( hp missed a copy He would almost Uar his halrl LOST RIVER RANCH 150 Hampshire and Suffolk Yearling Rams Registered Hamp and Suffolk EWES for SALE Top Quality and Breeding BIG FIRE SALE Dick Volter's Place 22 5': South Sixth Street IS NOW OYER We invite all our friends and their friendi to come in and have a look at the NEW LOOK... All newly decorated . , . Three new refriqera tort . , , New bar and stools and the same old friendly atmospherei Also TV at its best, hooked up with the Giq Coble. ALWAYS BEER AT ITS BEST! OLD FORT TAVERN PRESENTS FOR YOUR SPECIAL WEEKEND ENTERTAINMENT Miss Mary Lockridge Comedy Stripper and Singer PLUS All Colored Cast .INCLUDING AN EXOTIC DANCER FROM DIXIE FRIDAY AUGUST 27 SATURDAY AUGUST 28 Special Notice: Your Hostess ' GRACE PETERSON Is Again Running The Dining Room and Smorgasbord at LITTLE SWEDEN 57U So- 6,h Phon. 7676 All Old Customers And New Are Invited to Come in and Enjoy All Your. Old . Favorite' Swedish , Dishes Back On The SMOIIGASIlOItl) TABLE SMORGASBORD Served Sat. and Sun. Only Enjoy Tasty Cocktails And Dancing Nightly In The Lounge FORT KLAMATH. ORE. Rf. 2 Box 795 Phone 7914 or 79S4 1