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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1955)
tAGE EIGHT HELD AND NEWS KLAMATH FALLS. ORKGON FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 .'V J 1 - jj 'i !'.'-H,;' I I'M N 1 7 1 TV a va ' LJ 8 ' ldvenist Church To Hod Dedicatory Rites Saturday, Dedicatory oervices for the 8ev-!lfce Invocation by the pastor; an cnth Dy Adventist Church will beiuoucemenn and the offering 0. 0. held Saturday, October 22 In the Hard; offeratory, Andante Canta jmnosin natle rock structure that bile. Englemaun; opening hymn, Las bepn comDletcd at an esilmat- prayer by P. L. Chltwood- prayer THIS FINE STRUCTURE, the Seventh Day entiit Church, 1735 Main Street, will be dedicat ed debt-free" on Saturday, October 22. Tdedicatlon service will be at II a.m. The dedi catory sermon will be given by Elder L E. gi, president of the Oregon Conference, Port land. The pastor is the Rev. Preston Smith. Dulles Will ConfinD Ike I Pilots To Fly SUBJECTS of the Klamath Basin Potato kingdom will pay hom age tonight to a brand new monarch, dainty Queen Lou Ann Kndr who will accept Jhe crown, royal robes and the scepter of her realm during the annual festival banquet In the Merrill Grade. School gymnasium. Crowning of the queen and the in troduction of her four pretty princesses, Judy Main, Tulelake; Sonya DoGrando, Henley; Darleen Daniels, Merrill and Claud He Shuck, Bonanza. Queen Lou Ann represented the Malin High School. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis L. Kan dra of the Merrill Highway. . Quotes From The News (Itog. 0. S. Pat. Oft.) ' By UNITED PRESS OOrge wood, general mnnnger of net roll's do-it-yourself and home improvement show "There are still plenty of Jobs inal are beat done by experts Rep. Glare Hoffman, (R-Mlchi spcnklng to members of the D.tmrMora of the American Rev olution: : "As It is now, we have In this country too much higher education ror type and there are lew like that on campus." Glscle Thierry, 31-year-old Paris mannequin aiter finishing sixth in the Miss world Beauty contest In London; "It was unfair Sen. Walter P. Ocoi'ge (O-Oa) on the coming Big Four loieign ministers' coniercnce in ocncvn: "The greatest opportunity of lh century to do something for the nnri hot enough good, c o m m o n stability of the world Is now at sense. nano u we nave me courage to grasp It. It's a matter of vision Stand At Geneva Meting WASHINGTON Wl President his old World h comrade Elsenhower's peace talks with I fn-arms Marshal0orL'i 7hnltnv Russia were spread on the record who was at Gel, as RUssia's today as Secretary of State Dulles defense minister u prepared to take up where the President left off at the Geneva Big Four conference. They included Eisenhower's as surance Ui Russia that "under no circumstances is the United States ever going to be a party to ag gressive war against any na tion." An 88-page booklet of about 40,000 words, made public late yesterday by the State Depart ment, included formal statements made by Elsenhower and . other heads of government at the sum mit conference last July. . These statements already had been reported in substance. How-' ever, the record included the texts of about a half dozen of Eisen hower's statements which had never been made fully publicTl Only previously published state ments by the other principals were released. ' At one point, the President di rected his remarks especially at Michael Korzcn, whose wife slimmed down from 190 to 145 pounds to save their marriage end then announced she doesn't want lum any more: "If she doesn't love me, I don". care ir she gels down to 95 pounds. I don't want her back." Senior Robert H. Coon on the banning of short for women at the 8vrcuse University campus: "Shorts are for the Marilyn Mon- ' 1IKA1.TII IMI'ltoVF.8 BONN. Germany ifi chancel lor Adenauer's health Is steadily improving, It wau announced Thursday. The 79-ycar-old chan cellor has been confined to bed Willi bronchial pneumonia since Oct. 7. He kit his bed briefly for the in st time Wednesday. and courage." Albert Klnsey, author of the Klnsey Report, on the uproar touched off In the United States by a magazine article on' "Sin In Sweden:" "There is no more sin In Sweden than in the United States. There is far more leulitv in the Scan dinavian view on sexual morals than there is in the American one". Dr. Robert W. Benson, super visor of acoustic design at the Armour Research Foundation of the Illinois Institute of Technology, on some findings made in the study of noise in offices: "When its noisy the workers can't talk so much." and "II Ihe typewriter doesn't make any noise, the boss can't tell If his secrclaiy Isn't working." Butler Derides GOP Claims CHEYENNE, Wyo. ID Chair man Paul M. Butler of the Demo- cratic National Committee derided Republican claims of "peace and prosperity ' Wednesday. Address ing a party rally, he asked: "How can the Republicans claim to have restored prosperity when farmers are suffering a 2'j-billion dollar decline in iarm income, when small businesses are suffer ing on main streets and when 38 per cent of the automobile retail ers are lo.sinrj money? "When 13 per cent of our popu lation Is being pinched by a drop in farm prices, prosperity isn't sound." Butler said President Eisenhow er had promised to balance the budget and declared: It this ad. "I would partly ke my friend, Marshal 20y to listen to what I have say. i have known him for a g tme ana; he knows that. speis as soldier to soldier, I have nr uttered a single word -.hat I not beiieve to be the truth." Eisenhower protel R,,cSio-. contention that the 14, Atlantic Treaty Organization, !,se f01ces cisennower neaaea in j fts f jrs, supreme commander, -Dorol sivcly aimed at the So "I accepted this Job.cause j believed It to be a true ncy for During Strike CHICAGO im The Air Lines Pilots Assn. announced Thursday that United Air Lines pilots will continue to fly in the event of a threatened strike by the Flight Engineers International Assn. The FEIA has scheduled a strike for 12:01 a.m. Saturday because of a job security issue dispute with United. Kay McMurray, ALPA execu tive vice president, said the deci sion was made in a meeting with ALPA United Air Lines Pilot's Master Executive Council, which represents United pilots. The key issue of the threalened strike is the present and future policy of United to hire only flinht eneineers who are qualified pilots. ine airnne nas assured the night engineers' union that all non-pilot engineers now on Unlted's payroll would have continued job security but said it would hire only quali fied pilots In the future. The union has contended the air line "has refused to grant the Job security measures which now ap pear in all but one of the other flight engineer agreements In the industry. United employes 458 flight engi neers. McMurray said 376 pilot-engineers, fully qualified and certified as flight engineers, would man all vacancies left by the strike on all flights. peace. Eisenhower tomlkov "Personally I have had ,ugn 0( war. . ." , The record reflects Eis-iower-s insistence that he, Sovletpmier Bulganin. British Prime v,stcr Eden and French Premier.iule could only define the Eiitgst issues, leaving it to their-ejgn ministers to seek solutions, Ii is for this task that )ies leaves late today. Tho BiR)Ur foreign ministers' session sla al Geneva next Thursday but L is .stopping first at Rome for.,, ferenccs with Italian governs olticlals. He goes Sunday to I. for a Pre-Gcneva huddle NATO and British and Fre( The summit record nut out v lerdav Includes the directive fro. the Bitr Four heads of govcrnmel to the foreign ministers to take ill fication, European security, dis." eiV 3 -asl-wesl Roberta McGee and Jerry Chase Home Extension PLY ?;tsenhower is shown as srVltinrr o uaun aovici rears oi a reuni fied Germany allied to the West, He said he would give Russia America's "pledged word" that such fears are unfounded. But he warned that a partitioned Ger- many was a danger to the whole world because It might fall prey again to another Hitler out of a sense of Inferiority. Bulganin, the record shows, nr. gucd long and hard for an all ministration can't balanoe the I Europe security pact. He stressed budget in an era of what it claims to be peace and prosperity, we Democrats wonder when. If ever, Ihey can." on .'Associated Country Women 01 '"World. Tt!aext meeting will be No vpmhrtm . . , ly to "have no foreign troops re- cilne C h . OI. Jean malnlng In the territories of Eu-,: will bn r.V. , ' i ropoan stales." Wtracft. Maklnf Cakes More prime Soviet objective, eventual monstratcd "Foods For Enter ing." at the October 13 meet Qt the Bly Home Extension J at the home of Lynn Ken- .The meeting continued from 1 a.m. to 2 p.m. ir new members were wel '51 at the meeting. Doris Smith Mrct Lilly. Delia Melsness ?nairgie Long. The membership Ml ached 20. James Dixon gave a- repprt ed cost of ilUO.000. The ouuaing free of debt for the service. The church has been represented in Klamath Falls lor 63 years. Much of the work on the edifice was donated by the congregation with Bert Davis as construction foreman. Howard Perrln, Klamath Falls was the architect. Stone for the building was brought to Klam ath Falls from the C. C. Hard ranch on the Old Fort Road. Wom en of the church raised money to annlv on the builoing fund, otner assistance totaling 130,000 was pro vided bv the Oregon Conference of seventh Day Adventists Church es. The building, whiclk includes the sanctuary. Sabbath School rooms, Dorcas rooms and utility rooms, is heated by a hot water well. The building project was started in 1948 during the time that the Rev. Paul Alderson was pastor. Elders are F.' L. Chltwood and C. C. Hard. Head deacon is S. D. Chrowl. Ival Taylor is the Sabbath School superintendent and Mrs. I. J. Chambers is the organist. The program for the Sabbath services follows: Sabbath school, 9:30 a.m.; silent prayer and open-, ing hymn; prayer by H. B. Jonn son; secretary's report, Mrs. Wil liam Han-ell; remarks. Ival Tay lor; duet, Betty and Beryl Aider son: mission story, Mrs. John Roo bins; review, Bruce Campbell; les son, Murray Johnstone; duct, w. R. Babcock and Mrs. Preston Smith; missionary service, Mrs Randolph David. Morning worship service: prelude, Wagner by the Rev. Preston Smith; processional, choir; doxology and lesnonse. choir: duet, tiaer ina Mrs. Paul Alderson; sermon by Ihe Rev. Alderson; choir, Praise Ye Jehovah, Gounod; benediction, C. C. Haid; prayer response, choir; postlude, Lorenz. Dedication service. 3 p.m. pre lude. Song of Joy, Stebbins; violin processional, Meditation from Tha is, Fred J. Dallas; scripture read ing, the pastor; prayer. Elder R, F. I Bresee; prayer response, the choir: 1 solo, "How Beautiful Upon the i Mountains," Harker by Mrs. Pa tricia Brown Yank. History of the church, F. L. Chltwood; dedicatory sermon, Eld er L. E. Brlggs, president of the Oregon Conference, Portland; act of dedication and dedicatory pray, er, Elder P. C. Alderson; "Great Is the Lord," Mason, choir; thank offering offeratory, "Andante, h, O." Batiste: closing hymn, bene diction, D. M. Mclvor; prayer re. tponse. choir; postlude, Williams. Pianist will be Mrs. I. J. Cham beri. The organist will be Mrs. Arthur Dcnison of the Klamath Lutheran Church. Mrs. Preston Smith will direct the choir. DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT Pete Colley's Orch. AMERICAN LEGION CLUB 228 N. 8th STREET MEMBERS & GUESTS Langlle Lauds State Roads CHICAGO 'UP) Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of Washington held his state up as an example to the nation yesterday lor us nignway safety achievements. Langlie described now his state staged an all-out campaign that cut Washington fatalities Dy 1B.S per cent In 22 months. Despite the nroaress. the governor said, "we have just begun to fight." Langlie told a banquet audience nt the National Safety Congress last night that while Washington was making traffic safety history, the nation as a whole was able to cut traffic deaths by only 3 1-2 per cent. "Had the rata of reduction which Washington experienced been pro jected on the nation for this 22 month period." the governor said. 12.814 human beings would be living today. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS LOOK f OR THE HAPPY UTTLt DOG TOPS IN QUALITYJ LOW IN PRICE OhH-H! those OLDSMOBILES! i it Oh h h! New ftorllef T-MO h power , . . New Jrtnimr llviha. Malic ninoilinrw . . . Nc Snufin Styling! You'll uy "Oh-h-h!" f,r , ure when jrmi are OIl for '.id! f'.v ittMftJitetfiii ISeo them on "OHI Day" Nov. 3rd at your OLDSMOBILE Dealer's! POOLE'S BLUM IbiWejMI TryIMafl j for MOBILE HOMES . . . LOOK at these Low Prices on Luxury Livinq! 41' PAN AMERICAN PARAMOUNT 2-bcdroom, completely furnished. 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