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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1955)
SUNDAY, AUGUST 7. 1955 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEN t r"" -r ; - ; I 1 -i ' ' . I TV 2 1 LOOKING OVER a B-36 bomber ii Cadet Rodney D. Hugelman, ion of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hugelman of 2221 Applegate Avenue. He is one of 203 Air Force ROTC cadets now at George Wright Air Force Base, Washington, for four weeks of summer encampment.' He is a senior at Oregon State. Kenneth Roberts Death Told CHILOQUIN Kenneth Roberts, ifningtimB Klamath County resident, hied in Carlsbad, New Mexico. Tuesday evening, July 2, accord- Church Sets Work Day CHILOQUIN Saturday after noon, August 13, has been set as a work session for the friends of the Chiloquin Methodist Church with the Women's Society of Christian Service in charge of a potluck dinner which will be served at the end of the day. A list has been made of all the small repair Jobs that need doing on the church building and ground. All the help available is needed to complete the list. Workers are asked to come in work clothing and to bring paint brushes, scrub brushes, ladders, hammer or screw drivers. In addition to small carpentry chores it is hoped to scrub the outside walls of the building. A time of fellowship and accom plishment is planned. Church To Hear Guest Speaker Coming here highly recommend ed by coast ministers, a former lumber company executive of Los Altos, Califonia, will speak Sunday at 11 a.m. at the Assembly of God Church, Eighth and Oak streets. He is David P. Larsen who will also show pictures of Palestine at the 7 '30 service Sunday evening. Special music by the church choir will be rendered at both the morning and evening services. Pastor C. E. Lebeck announced. The Rev. Mr. Lebeck said all of the public are welcome. Supervisors Plan Highway Project YREKA The Siskiyou County board of supervisors has sched uled the unfinished portion of the state line road from Dorris to Tule lake as the first project to be started with this year's federal and state aid funds. The funds are supplied on a matching basis annually. NORGE Dryer Pair BOTH for only MAY BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY NORGE ... the ONLY dryer we can bacK oy real perrormance-provea- t 30-day MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE. t Low Down Payment -Easy Appliances Kitchens ing to word received locally by close friends. The body was shipped to Severy, Kansas, h i s home town, for burial. He leaves his widow, Gladys. Roberts had been in very poor health during tne past lew years. The Roberts had moved, to Chil oquin In the late 1920's where they ownea ana operated the only the ater in town. It was a large wood' en structure at the southwest end of Main Street. A few years later iney moved to a brick building a block closer to the center of town and until the late 1940's had a thriving business. They made their home in a place on Chiloquin Heights which they had purchased from the George Freids and which is now owned by Forest FTeid. Poor health caused the Roberts to sell the Oem Theater to Alan Prescott about five years ago and they moved to Klamath Falls where they stayed for nearly two years before moving south for Robert's health. Supervisors To ' Meet In Alturas ALTURAS The regular meet ing of the Northern California Su pervisors Association and road commissioners will be held In AI turas on August 13 and 13. An nouncement was made by O. P. Smelcer, Modoc County road com missioner. Bob Glenn, associate engineer and extension representative of transportation and traffic engineer ing, will speak on 'Minimum Geo metric Standard and Subdivi sions." 'It should prove to , be a very interesting meeting to all persons in work along that line," Smelcer said. SUNDAY, f AT CnA4r 5S'aW if KLAMATH FALLS. ORCSON Phone 6496 For You Can Rely on Tele-pliance - and Servicing Washers and NORGE RATES FIRST j With Tele-Pliance . . . ond with i Independent Testing Laboratories! j ?HWWWWWWIWWHWWWWWWHWWHWWV And Your Old W.ih.r automatic washer and j Ha,, Washer Terms TELE - 11th ond Television vvoinut vCli I CIV 770? Our Specialty Authorities Tighten Rules On Credit To NEW YORK ( Business held to a scorching pace this week. The administration, scenting an in flstionary threat, tightened the screws on credit. The new squeese on credit means that you'll find it harder and nore expensive to borrow mon ey. That's the case whether you plan to buy a car "on time." get a mortgage on a house, or borrow millions from the banVs for in ventory accumulation. Announced intention olithe credit Guests At Church Set CHILOQUIN Guest speakers will occupy the pulpits at the Fort Klamath and Chiloquin Methodist churches for the following two Sun days while the Rev. Edmund Stan ton is on vacation. Preaching will be Wesley Langrell and James Speed, religion directors at the Crater Lake National Park during the summer months under the aus pices of the National Council of Christian churches. Langrell, from Midway City, California, is a student at the Berkeley Baptist Divinity School ana in addition to helping with tne religious activities in the park, is night watchman around the lodge, cafeteria area. Speed, from Birmingham, Ala bama Is a student at Columbia Theological Seminary at Decatur, Georgia, a Southern Presbyterian College. He Is night desk clerk at the Crater Lake Lodge. When he completes his work in September L ne will go to Death Valley Nation al Park where he will carry on religious work from October until May, when he will return to the south. - The two young - men conduct Sunday school, non-denominational worship services, lead discus sion periods and show religious movies at the community building in Crater Lake park. Their sched ule is so full that this will be their only speaking engagement outside the park. The Rev. Stanton Is adviser for the National Council Committee which is in charge of the religious program in the park. Smoke Causes False Alarm YREKA A diesel locomotive let off an extra burst of smoke Tuesday morning and caused false lire alarm to be turned in to the U.S. Forest Service head' Quarters here.' When investigating firemen, who received the alarm at 8:10 a.m.. arrived on the scene east of Ten- nant, they found that a locomotive being used to tear up the track of a former Long-Bell Lumber Company railroad had given off extra heavy exhaust when starting work in the morning. The locomotive had carboned up during the night, and the extra smoke appeared to a passerby to be a fire. The locomotive was run ning without any excess smoke by the time firemen arrived. '55 CHEVROLET $1845 DUGAN & MEST 410 So. 6th Ph. 4113 DINNERS Food At Its Best AMERICAN and CHINESE DINNERS Served From 12 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Orders To Go in Selling Dryers! Norge Dryer AC too AW 405 PLIANCE l - BYITP - r Phone Open 9 'til 6 Daily Control Boom move: To keep the boom from getting out of hand, and to fore stall another postwar round of run away price increases. One top ad ministration official put it this way: "The business boom Is getting pretty exuberant. It's the consen sus of the economic and linancial side of the administration that the government should eert some ef fort to keep it orderly." ' The exuberance of the boom was blatantly apparent almost any where you wanted to look. The steel industry, whose payroll hit the staggering record total of nearly 2PS . million dollars in June, scheduled operations this week at 84.4 per cent of capacity. That should mean an outpouring of 2,278.000 tons of steel. Electric power output at latest count was the highest for any week in history: automobile production. although down from the previous week, was still a good 40 per cent greater than a year ago. Soft coal production in the latest week was up nearly 28 per cent from last year; freight carload lugs were up 16 per cent. Dun & Bradr.treet said retail - trade smashed all mid-summer records. There were other boom signals. Chrysler reported record sales for the first half-year and a four-fold Jump In profits. The nation's 126 biggest railroads disclosed that their combined earnings for the first six months were up 79 per cent from a year ago. The First National City Bank of New York toted uo the first-half, piuiun ui mujur corporations. The tally showed a 31 per cent gain over their combined first-half earnings last year. Construction boomed as never before. The Commerce and Labor Departments reported that build ing actlvitiy in the first seven months this year rocketed to an all-time high of more than 23 bil lion dollars. Highwavs. homes, stores and office buildings set the pace. Pressures generated by the stepped-up pace of business made themselves felt in two familiar forms: shortages and rising prices. Price hikes were announced by producers of aluminum, steel scrap, auto tires, Canadian crude oil. Meanwhile you could find plenty of exuberance among consumers they were buying at a record clip. and going into hock to do it. The Federal Reserve Board reported that installment debt skyrocketed in June to an unprecedented high of nearly 25 billions. On-the-cutf buying of new automobiles ac counted for most of the rise. TICKETS PLACED SANTA CRUZ (UP) A second large moving 'company was picket ed today by the AFL teamsters in the union's attempt to win new con tract benefits from the six majcr companies in Santa Cruz County. Kit " . not) 'em 1l J 9 This Broiier is FREE With the Purchase of a Freeier or Refrigerator WEED LIONS WERE HOSTS to some 35 guests at their annual fish fry held recently at Dr. H. L. Vidrieltsen's Hidden, Valley ranch home. Center is Lion President Les Kyle dishing up a plate for Charley Powell, left. Dr. Vidricksan, right, sampling the fare, is first vice president of the club and Powell is chair man of the bus shelter project. Photo by Gaynor Malin Legion Women Meet MALIN Hie American Legion Auxiliary of Malin. No. 84. met at the Park Hall Wednesday evening. August 3. with President Hazel Ka- lina in the chair. New members initiated were Frieda Hale, Marian Hamilton. Mary McAuliffe and Julie McAul Iffe. Ann Lahoda was in charge oi initiation, assisted by Martha Brotimnek, Nettie Pope, Ethel Hamilton and Inez Fallhee. Mrs. Kalina reported on her trip to the state convention at Bend where she was accompanied by Irene Fiietag. Nettie Pope, the other delegate, was unable to at tend. The auxiliary members voted to hold a breaklast the morning of November 11 in order to raise money for future projects. Ethel Hamilton was named ciiainnan. D See us for all your photographic needs! LEO'S CAMERA SHOP. Exclusively 836 . 'cau Y"" fieally flWing . P - " " " unls.Voucan a m )". . . use W 14 It was also voted to hold a food sale at Wilde's Store. Saturday, August 16, with Lucille Gray as chnirman. Hostesses for the meeting were Nettie Pope and Elizabeth Faygr. REAPPRAISED SALEM W Polk County offi cials in Dallas signed a contract Fridriy to have the State Tax Com mission reappraise all property in the county. Cominq to Klamoth Falls Dollar Days THURS. - FRI. - SAT. INSIST ON LEO'S LASTING LUSTRE! 1-DAY SERVICE Photography Phone 2-3331 d) -afV , ,no ,he tun s" - , k over the r." " . nd u Cn S! , come in nd lo ote Sot only do m -,ntor and lrel . . voU, or you - 734 So. 6th Dairy Woman's Martha Augusta McCumber, 11,1 resident of Dairy for the last 63 years, died at the home of a daughter. Mrs. Emma Heltron. Jacksonville, on August 4. She had been visiting there for several weeks. Mrs. McCumber was born in Pennsylvania, October 31, IBM. She was married in 1893 to Orrin A. Fire Levels Ranch Shed Fire In a large tin storage ahed on the Keith Rice ranch in Langell Valley was discovered by Nancy Rlsse, a, about 8 p.m. Friday. Nancy's parents Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter Rlsse live In the house on the ranch. The shed was used for tool ant machinery storage and a large caterpillar-type trdctor which was usally stored there escaped destruc tion as it had been In use for plow, ing and was parked in the field The fire totally destroyed the shed. No estimate of damage cost or in- surance coverage was available at press time. Mr. and Mrs. Rice, owners of the ranch, credited quick work by the. Bonanza city and rural fire trucks and cooperation of neigh bors who rushed to the scene with saving the house and other nearby buildings from destruction. At Table i Our famous menus offer vou a wida ond wonderful selection of snacks and full course dinners. Come in any time for aood food, well-prepared and well-served. , ' mSH DnUILCK eoraJo0alsogetyo cni" m, shovn b owv.tH ony ,or or i0and.avm0,;'y 6 If Death Learned McCumber, Klamath County ranch er. Her husband died in 1934. She is survived by three sons. Albert C. McCumber of Canada, Orlan A. and Harry G. McCumber of Dairy; one daughter, Mrs. Emma Heffron, Jacksonville; two brothers, Charles Burgdorf, Grants Pass and Albert Burgdorf k Dairy; two sisters Mrs. Minnie Arant, nairy and Mrs. Lena Flackue, Ashland: also two grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. from Ward's Funeral Heme with the Rev. D. L. Proett of the Peace Memorial Presbyterian Church officiating. Interment will follow at Loss River Cemetery, Bonanza, LOSE 178331!! TWApdi iim Mm m wis lose poviMM wtUk four very Ant bos 2.M) at atoaeyi back. Takim M dirctd Aydm curbs yoar appetite lot aatotnaucavr at Itaa. km weifthe ?"23T' . aturalt. NooVmta AYDS VTTAMM AIVO MMftAl CAHDY , 9th end Mala Mi. 2-1475 IWalMakaltr Service in Style or Counter Dine on t-bone steak or dunk o douqhnut you always qet prompt, cheerful serv ice. THE 620 MAIN Beit by any Test Ph. 4197 f