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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1956)
MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1956 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE THIRTEEN .- t , vrvririe to rnf-nrrORa Untie 1 hhv sivcn thai thtt tM- deraigned haa been appointed admini strator of the astat of Blanch L. McDonald, deceaad, by the Circuit Court of Klamath County. Oregon, and that all persons having ciaima against saia estate are nereoy nouuca piv : the tame, together, wun propci urtiifKara tn !( administrator a! Suit a i Malhai Buildina. Klamath Falls, Oregon, within six months from date of the first publication of this notice, which li October ann. iww. J. C. O'Neill. Attorney for Adm, i-4Mr M Smith Administrator. 204 Oct. 29. Nov. 9, 13. 19t 1954 HOME ON LEAVE for 14 days are Bill Crumpacker. left, arte Gary Pearson. Both have been in "training at Point Magu, California and will return there. Bill is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Crumpacker. Gary is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Pearson. BASIN BRIEFS Legal Notice NOTICE Of FINAL SETTLEMENT IN THE UIMUll LUUBl ur THE STATE Or OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OT KLAMATH In the Matter of the Istata of John pearcn. also. Known ai, jbck nra. Deceased. Notlpa la- herahv a-lvan that I have fllarf mv final ipenunl as Admtntatra. tor 01 me aoove entiuca estate ana that the court hai set Novemoer an, 1956, at the hour of 10:00 a.m. o'clock aa the , time for hearing objections to saia una) account. jfonert u. rucicett, Administrator Proctor and Puckett Attorneys at Law 01B Main street Klamath Falls, Oregon No. 211 Oct. )a. Nov. S, 11 1. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT IN THE CIRCUIT COURT WI THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF KLAMATH In the Matter of the Estate of Wesley W. Weston, Deceased. Notice la hereby given that I have filed my final account a Administra trix of the above entitled estate and that the Court has set November 30, 1958. at ' the hour of 10: A.M. as the time, for hearing objections to .aid final account. Lela Belle Weston Administratrix Proctor and Puckett Attorneys at Law 318 Main. Street Klamath Fall.. Oreeon No. 209, Oct. 29, Nov. 8, 13, IB Chiloquin A drivers license! examiner will be on duty at the Chiloquin City Hall on Tuesday, October 30, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. An examiner will be on duty also in the Klamath Falls office on that date. Reservation Jayceei are hold ing an informal Halloween party for members, their wives and in vited guests Friday evening, No vember 2. Place will be an nounced. Return Home Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bettles and their children, Agency Lakeshore, returned Wednesday from a several days business and pleasure trip to Washington. First Child The Rev. and Mrs. Jesse Alldridge of the Lorella Full Gospel Church of Langell Valley have a son, Daniel Mark, born October 23 weighing 8 lbs., 12 ozs. Company Mr. and Mrs. Ray Prowell of' Chiloquin were hosts last weekend to friends from Dil lard,' Mr. and Mrs. Mason David son, their son and daughter. AA Groups Meet Here .. Many youthful compulsive drink ers are turning to Alcoholics Anon ymous for help, a leader of the organization said here Sunday. AA delegations from all parts of Oregon met in Klamath Falls to formulate plans to expand their program for aiding persons who are afflicted with the disease of alcoholism. Doc D. of Portland, secretary of the Oregon group, credited wide spread publicity given the move ment for attracting younger alco holics to the program. "Fifteen years ago," he ex plained, "the majority of AA mem bers ranged between 45 and 60 years old. In recent years that has changed. It used to be generally believed that a compulsive drink er wouldn't do much about h i s drinking problem until he lost his job and family and landed on skid-road. "Now we have quite a few mem bers who are in their early 20's and a great many more still in their 30 s, he continued. These young people realize they are prob-1 lem drinkers and decided to do something about it before they hit bottom." AA delegations from Portland, The Dalles, Woodburn, Astoria, Eugene, Medford, Grants Pass and North Bend attended the two day conference which ended Sunday. Attend Dinner Attending the Monday evening dinner for edu cators held in Klamath Falls were the following Chiloquin people, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hale, Mr. and Mrs. John Mathis, Hiroto Zakoji, Malcolm Anderson and Bill Nor- val. Meeting The Bonanza Wom en s Club meeting has been post poned from November 6, until No vember 7, because of election. The meeting will be in the library at 2 p.m. Final plans will be made for the annual bazaar and cooked food sale to be held December 1. It is important that all members attend. Following the business meeting, Mrs. Florence Horn will show members how to etch glass. Each person to bring a clear glass or plate to work on. Visitors at the John Brown's of Bonanza were his twin sisters and a brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fowler and Delora Brown all of Portland. Transferred Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brewer and their four chil dren left Saturday from Klamath Agency for Cheyenne, South Da kota where he has been trans ferred. They have been stationed here for just over a year. From Sutherlin to visit his relatives in Bonanza, . were Mr. and Mrs., Pete Bray and Dickie Final Plans have been made for'the annual turkey dinner and bazaar to be given by the Guild of St. Barnabas Church, at the Bonanza school cafeteria Novem ber 3, starting at 6 p.m. They plan on feeding over 500 people. Staying in Langell Valley with his parents the Ben Norks, are the Jim Norks. He was re leased from Klamath Valley Hos pital October 25, after several weeks of serious illness. Malln Home Extension group will meet Friday, November 9, at 8 p.m. at the Community Hall. Program will be Buying and Us ing Foam Rubber." Visitor. Mrs. Sara Welsh, longtime resident pi Tulelake, now living in Portland, and her daugh ter, Mrs. Donna Robeson of that city are spending a few days with friends in Tulelake. Farmer City Was Quite A Place In The I8601 s By BARMAN W. NICHOLS United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) I have learned, at i late date, that In 1890 it was against the law in Farmer City, 111., to fly a kite or scare a team of horses in the "business district." Penalty for flying the kites ran from SI to $25 fines. The fine was the same for exciting a team of spanking bays. - There was some relation between kites and batting a bay on the rump. Horses, back there 66 years ago in my home town, were equally allergic to a loose kite and an unexpected any thing that was beyond the view of the blinders. All of these regulations are con tained In an old book I found on my last trip home. It is called "The Municipal Code Of Farmer City," and most likely is the last copy extant, yellowed with the test of time. POOL HALLS SHUNNED Under the code, cops in the vil lage, which isn't much bigger now than it was In the long back would lose their badges if they went into a dram shop or a billiard parlor unless on official cnores. The city was a little tough on porters, too. They were not to run around cussing out the citizens. or to be found guilty of loud talk and hallooing." In the event that any citizen should come down with small pox, tne atienaing doctor was duty bound to hang a sign on the pa tients gate reading "small pox here!" And the doc himself was compelled to run home and change his duds before he treated another person for a sore thumb, or any omer misery. The code on "fire limits" was pretty strict, too. Regulations for bade residents to "stack hay, etc.." In fire limits. Cows and horses could be stabled in the city limits, but unless an owner wanted to fight the law he had best see that his back yard was forked out every day and the residue hauled away before it started to "fpul up the neighbor hood." A heavy penalty was assessed on the owner of a cellar door that was left open for some neighbor, or anybody else, to come along and take a tumble. The pain for such negligence was from $5 to $100, according to the amount of damage suffered to life and llmD. BILLBOARDS BANNED Billboards erected on public grourds or private property were against the rules it same oc casion cause danger or inconven ience to the public. Mostly, I NOTICE OF FINAL SaTTTLEMENT IN THE C1HCUIT LUUKI UF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF KLAMATH In the Matter of the Estate. of Ruth T nnrrn nraneri Notice is hereby given that I have filed my final account as Administra tor of the above entitled estate and that the Court has set November 26, 1SS6. at the hour o iu:uu A.m. o ciocx the time for Hearing ODjecttona- to said final account. Elaon nay Barron, Administrator Proctor and Puckett Attorneys at Law 318 Main street Klamath Falls. Oregon 210 Oct. ZB, NOV. o, ix . Construction Man Falls To Death WINSLOW, Ariz. HI - A welder from Eugene, Ore., 25-year-old Wayne Blackley, plunged 47 feet to his death in a construction acci dent here Saturday. He was laying steel rods across the top of a new lumber refuse burner and witnesses said he fell after losing his balance on a loose rod. , Blackley leaves a wife and child In Eugene: He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil R. Blackley of Springfield. NOTICE or FINAL SETTLEMENT IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON TOR THE COUNTY OF KLAMATH In the Matter of the Estate of Val R. Collins, aka Val Riley Collins, De ceased. Notice Is hereby given that I have filed my final account as Administra tor of the above entitled estate and that the court has set November 26, 1936. at the hour of 10:00 A.M. o'clock as the tima for hearing objections to saia una i account. Norman Wilson - Administrator ; Proctor and Puckett Attorney at Law S1H Main Street Klamath Falls, ' Oregon 200 UCt. B, NOV. 3, 12 IV ttilw 7-,. . -- f. j, v,. ;: ELECT i 'Vl REED I'll ' ' suppose, tjis code went Into the books to keep exposed the leafy beauty which still Is a sight to behold in Farmer City, Dogs, under the law, were sub ject to tag and tax even in that early day. On day one In the month of May a person owning a male dog had to kick in a $1 fee. If it was a lady dog the tariff was double for obvious reasons. And the city fathers, in com piling the code, went along so far as to define a dog, and they did a pretty good job of it. The word dog," the legal language ran, "wherever it is used in this ordinance, shall be deemed to include every animal of the dog kind, female as well as male. Sometimes I think back and miss Farmer City. Loose kites, open cellar doors, scared horses, hitching posts, loose dogs and aV. KLAMATH PALL) OftUM OPEN EVERY DAY AMERICAN CHINESE foods at Ihtir brt! Ben B. Let, Mejr. TU 4-64M For Order. T. Take Out SHERIFF OF KLAMATH COUHTY jf 1 1 years f.w .nforc.mint xp.ri.nc. In Klamath County. Your vot. will be s appreciated. M. Adr. S. B. Ktltsnb.rg 'J I LZJ 150 lbs. of baggage checked FREE CITY OF PORTLAND TO CHICAGO ffffffm (DP 3Z On aach adult foraj plui all tht luggagt ntadtd anroutal Calltrwrlltt Union NdHff Phon TU 4-4301 . ' ' KFLW 8:30 Tonite Klamath Caunty Dcmoeratto Central Ca mm lit a ana Demacratta Club, Etdrefl Haaaan, chairman. 0Ofl .Plymouth leaps 3 full years ahead-the only car CRUSADE VATICAN CITY, Italy (UP) Pope Pius XII called on the world's Catholics Sunday to join in a ''crusade of prayer" for the people of Hungary. 1 V -1 y MRS. WILLIAM DUNCAN Silrrrton komtmaker ssjk "WOMEN ARE TOTING FOB DOUG McKAT BECAUSE... M firmly believe that Doug McKay is an honest, loyal and conscientious worker for the Republican parry and mil of the people of Oregon. That is the kind of leadership Ore gon women want." Tott DOUG McKAT Senior ft A. MrKsr far Sole Cmm, W. L. rN ruin, a., nu s.w.w.a, ., on. 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