Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 19, 1958, Page 11, Image 11

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    WEDNESDAY, ' FEBRUARY 19. 1958
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE ELEVEN
BASIN BRIEFS
Tulelake Elementary School
?TA members will meet Februar;
20 at 2:30 p.m. in the school audi
torium for a Founders' Day silver
tea. Mrs. Eugene Smith, special
chairman for the day. will assist
Mrs. Tom Slaughter with the pro
gram. Dorothy Johns, Siskiyou
County school nurse, will talk
about the visual and hearing test
ing program carried out at the
schools. All past presidents will
'be special guests.
Square Dances in the Moose
Hall are continuing to draw en
thusiastic dancers but more are
welcome every Monday night, es
pecially men dancers to balance
the crowd. Dances start at 8 p.m.
with J. D. Stanley calling.
Card Party The Lost River
Grange No. 846 will hold its reg
ular card party Friday in the 01
ene Grange Hall. The public is
invited.
Delegates Siskiyou County
delegates to the Cascade Sanitor
ium Council held Saturday, Feb
ruary 15, in Red Bluff were Mrs.
M. Li. viariCKsen, president 01 uie
Siskiyou County Health and Tu
berculosis Association, Weed:
Mrs. Harriett Clough, Yreka. and
Mrs. Marian Newberry, Mount
Shasta.
Ctrl Scout and Brownie Troop
leaders, assistant leaders and troop
committee members of Weed will
meet at the Weed Court Club
Wednesday, February 2B, at 7 p.m.
lor the monthly program meeting.
Licenses
Suspended
Harold Lloyd Davis, 26, 5629 In
dependence Street, license suspend
lrt F.i.rf The Altl.rn ClM, um; -,l-Br " rcu.uai,
suspended
Fellow-Rebekah committee for the!135? 'or driving durini
wLSy. February Tat 8 p m 0TI- IT 0n"
to receive campaign maters J"! as f February 3 for drmng
ir i .,, n ui on the wrong side of the highway.
iuiii uyitr iuiui onu .uia. vital ics i ,, . tl - u,.-i
f n.ii ,v,irm i..- ii,.,1 hugene Alfred Heffner. ii. Box
Altnra. rfri'v. I30. Ken0- license suspended reb-
Aituras am e. ly 6 for fai,ure ,0 snow proo( of
. . . ! financial responsibility.
murch lonrerence ihe Hev.l r;,ric sianW k'nimuslti m
Karl E. Olson and the Rev. Rog-ius Warring Street, license sus
er Smith of the Federated Com-jpemed February 7 for failure to
munity Church, Cedarville. re-;show proof 0f financial responsibil-
ocvwuriy, iciumeu r nuuy iium u:i;v
rm.n., ru,. U r
vMiisi cgmiuuai viiut in cuiitei cute
in Berkeley.
IFYE Delegate
To Talk Here
Visitors In Medford for three
weeks are Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bech
doldt, Bonanza, who are staying
at the home of his brother. Earl,
and family.
From Idaho Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Peacock, Driggs, Idaho, were
guests at the home of his broth
er, Hazen Peacock, and family in
Bonanza on their way to South
ern California.
At Ranch Mr. and Mrs. Ward
Dolan, Klamath Falls, are stay
ing with Frank W. Brown at his
ranch iit Langcll Valley.
To Idaho Mr. and Mrs. 0. C.
Johnson, Langell Valley, left for
Emmett. Idaho, Monday morning
to spend several weeks with their
nephew, Albert Dearborn.
Choir Slates
Merrill Program
MERRILL The Wings Over
Jordan Choir will present a
concert at the Merrill Presbyter
ian Church on Friday evening.
February 21, at 8 p.m. Purpose of
the appearance of this talented
sinning group is to promote in
terracial friendship and good will
through music and fellowship.
Following the- concert, a coffee
and social hour will be given by
the Women's Association of the
Presbyterian Church.
An invitation is extended to the
public to attend this musical pro
gram, mere will be no admis
sion charge. A free will offering
will be taken during the concert
Ted Tidwell, Oregon's 1957 Inter
national Farm Youth Exchange
delegate to India, returned to the
United States in early January 1958
after spending four months witn
farm families in India. Ted was
born at The Dalles and makes his
home with his mother on their
2,790-acre farm near Dufur.
One of the highlight s of Ted's
stay in India, was being able to
live with Velur Sundarum, or San
dy, an Indian IFYE exchangee.
who visited Oregon in 1956 and
stayed with the Tidwells.
There were seven boys and one
girl in his host father's family.
The sons stay in the father's house.
When they marry, the wife is
brought to live in the same house, j
Things were never humdrum,
Ted says, as sometimes there were
twenty or thirty members in one
house!
Ted . has attended Northwest
Christian College at Eugene: Ore
gon State College, and the Oregon
Technical Institute in Klamath
Falls. Farm technology and voca
tional agriculture have been his
major interests.
Tidwell's speaking schedule in
Klamath Falls will be as follows:
Friday, February 21, 1 p.m.,
Shasta Homedale Extension Unit;
8:30 p.m. Eagles Lodge.
Monday, February 24, 10 a.m.,
Oregon Technical Institute: 7:30
p.m., 4-H clubs at the fairgrounds
(this meeting will be open to the
public.)
Tuesday, February 25. noon, Ex
change Club; 7:30 p.m. 20-30 Club.
Moved Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Tidrick and family have moved
from Bonanza to Langell Valley to
live.
First Place Dale Hill, son of
-Mr. ana Mrs. Lou Hill. Merrill
won first place honors in the storv
telling division when he represent
ed Merrill School in' the junior
couniy speeen testiva! held at Al
tamont School last Fridav. Hill':
subject was "Whitewashing the
fence - by Mark Twain.
FRED B. WAYBRIGHT, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Way
bright, Route 3, is a mem
ber of the Army's honor
guard at Mannheim, Ger
many. Pfc. Waybright, a
clerk with the 529th Military
Police Company, entered
the Army in November, 1956
and received basic training
at Fort Gordon, Georgia.
The 21-year-old soldier is a
1954 graduate of El Cerrito
High School in California
and attended Washington
State College. He was for
merly employed by a Boise
construction firm.
Ycung Army QfCtcerHolds
Key To Oil Rich Sumatra
JAKARTA, Indonesia (fl A i United States. P.ut Bnrlian, whose
quietly devout young Moslem j translates into "Diamond."
army officer named Barlian holds !raii upset nil plans being hatched
the key to the vast oil resources ! here, in Padang or in the faraway
on the rebellious island of Su- uoard rooms,
matra. i The reaction of the oil compan-
ha u.m .!.! .h ics to the rebel demands is expect-
so-far bloodless dispute he will not ;l(! . b.e hcsiCint. All of them ( reserved than
allow southern Sumatra, site 0( "" " "". k"f-
multimillion-dollar American and; ucl ouKji.no
European oil installations, tq be-!rnm:n , " ,Jav? "d tllel
come a battleground. I ' nghls Outer Islands
ti. . u ' Tall, bespectacled and noted for
The new anti-Communist rebel;,,:,. fr.lhiiilu R:,rlinn h h m,
fu, ... mill III 111 V,CIMI.U ouiumiui
has ordered the companies to
cease paying royalties to the cen
tral Indonesian government and
to stop all deliveries to the oil
dependent island of Java. If Bnrl
ian who commands the south
bars the way, the rebel gesture
will be an empty one..
Whatever decisions are taken by
the giant oil companies will be
reached in the board rooms of
London, Amsterdam and the
first name) once was chief of
staff to Col. Maludin Simbolon,
one of the four young colonels
who organized the. Padang government.
A lieutenant colonel in his early
PRAYER
MAUN - The
DAY
Women's As
sociation of the Malin Presbyter
ian Church will be the host group
to members of the United Church
30s, Barlian never went beyond, Women of the Lower Basin in ob-
hiiili school. Uia troops their
number Is a military secret in
clude some Javanese who mi
grated. Though an opponent of Jakarta
rule, he is less critical and more
the
Padang mili-
L
servance of World Day of Pray
er, at the church, Friday. Feb
ruary 21. The meeting will open
at 2 p.m. Mrs. Elva Smalley wil
serve as chairman. A coffee hour
will follow the services. All wom
en of the Lower Basin are invit
ed to attend.
PLUMBING
Repairs Remodeling
Drain Lines Septic Tanks
New or Old Work
Free Estimating
Trailerhouia Plumbing
Kimes Plumbing
1720 So. th
& Heating
TU 4-8620
-Jnn n
D
K
I IV ' 1 J Tj . ......
u
your high protein source
mmmmmammmmmmw in niiajajwaafpaaMaM
CALHOUN'S CONTINUE THEIR ANNUAL FEBRUARY
i3s 1 Li! ' H x
mm 1 JI ' i
Toys - Games IJIA jJr-. fT?223r S,-, fitlW & k .. t
FLOYDS STUDIO The ycor w t0 P$
Forbads fleet's WMt&
PHONE TU 4-4526 J TU ,5520 U lmm MM WJa LS
. i hTiFmPif w 'W'mi n i
m f' -
III I II! I.I ,,iCT..lT: I ' liPqg, , N
Daw
On The Record
: KLAMATH FALLS ,
BIRTHS
(URLS
BOWKN Born to Mr. tnd Mr.
John Bowen, February 13, in thp
Kllmith Valley Hoiplial, a daughter
weighing ft lbs., 12' 4 ou.
BELLOTTI Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Atdo Bellottl, February 14, tn the
Klamath Valley HosjMtal, daughter
weighing 7 Ibi., 15 om,
PlERSON Born to Mr. and Mrs.
William Plenon, February 13. In the
Klamath Valley Hospital, daughter
weighing 7 lb-r, 10l ou.
SURRAN Born to Mr. and Mre.
Alfrnri L. Surran. February 16. In the
Klamath Valley Hospital, daughter
weighing 6 lbt., 10 J ozi.
CUNNINGHAM Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd V. Cunningham, February
18, in the Klamath Valley Hospital,
a daughter weighing 7 log., 11 ou.
PRFNTICE Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Wlnfred Prentice, February 17, In the
Klamath Valley Hoipltal, a daughter
weighing 7 lbs., 14'i on.
MOORE Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Garrett Moore, February 17, in the
Klamath Valley Hoipltal, a daughter
weighing 6 lbs., oza.
ROYS
WOOD Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Twia Wood. February 13. In the
Klamath Valley Hospital, a son weigh
ing 5 ini . oza.
DAUGHZRTY Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby G. Daugherty. February
14. In the Klamath Valley Hospital.
son u'nirhinv fl lbs., a oza.
FITZGERALD Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Filzaeraia. reoruary
In the Klamath Valley Hospital, a son
weighing 9 lbs.. 10 ou.
MIl.t.rR Born to Mr. and Mi
Clarence Miller, February 14, in the
Klamath Valley Hospital, a son weigh
ins 7 lbs., 13 ozs.
MpCLELLAN Born to Mr. and Mra
John McClellan. February 15, in
the Klamath Valley Hospital, a son
u(fhln A lbs . fl'v ezs.
CONLIN Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Martin H. Conltn. February 16, in thj
Klamath Valley Hospital, a son weigh-
0 lbs.. 15 ozs.
BAKER Born to Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert H. Baker. February 10,
the Klamath Valley Hospital, a son
weighing 6 lbs . 1 or.
NOLAN Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis L. Nolan, February 17. tn the
Klamath Valley Hospital, a son
hi n 0 lbs.. 3 Ozk.
SCHOLTEN Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald O. Scholten. February
17. in the Klamath Valley Hospital,
a son weighing v in., j ou.
frail ROI.NDUP
Girls, 61; Boys, 60.
MOUNT UMASTA
'BIRTHS
DOUGLASS Born in Mount Shas
ta, renruary a. to iwr. ana ,-nrs. wii.
Ham C. Douglass, Mount Shasta, i
dauchter.
STOCKTON Born in Mount Shasta
February II to Mr. and Mrs. E u.
Stockton. Mount Shasta, a daughter.
POTTER Born in Mount Shasta
Februarv 1.1 to Mr. and Mrs. O. D
Potter. wrf dausrhter.
RODRIGUEZ Born in Mount
Shasta, February 13. lo Mr. and Mrs
August Rodrigur?. Vieed. a da lighter.
DERRICK Born in Mount Shasta
February 15 to Mr. and Mrs. O. H
Derrick, Dunsmutr. a daughter.
TWO FEET-LONG ARMS
DL'LUTH. Minn. UP The
Recko Meat Plant lock 230 pounds
of beef tennorloin out ot us re
frigerators Tuesday and set it in
the sub-zoro outdoors, on a ledge
16 feet above sround to protect
it from four-footed marauders. A
two-footed thief stole it.
O Newspaper
SPOT ADS
are inexpensive
repeated daily 94c
BSm
. . . is a bank built to serve the financial needs of you
the people of the Klamath Basin.
Our staff is well qualified, through years of experience
to make you any of the following loans in a prompt and
courteous manner.
0 Business Loans
0 Appliance Loans
e Life lnsLicr.ee Loans
Auto Loans
0 Home Improvement Loans
Real Estate Loans
Salary Loans
Inventory Loans
MULTICOLOR SUPER QUALITY AXM1NSTER
Register (J
Multicolor leaf tweed effect in 12 foot widths.
Beautiful decorator colors ccsnbined with beige
leaf design. One of the finest quality carpet buys
of the year.
ALL WOOL TWEED
12.95 sq. yd.
ALL WOOL AXMINSTER
Sq. Yd.
3 PAID ON ALL SAVINGS
All deposits insured up to $10,000 by the F.D.I.C.
A fine quality famous brand carpet
In colon that will beautify any room
in your home. Choose from Gold,
Green, or Beige. This it an exception
al buy so shop early.
Reg. 10.95 NOW Q88
Sq.Yd. ONLY 0
Viscose Tweed Carpet
You can't buy a better quality car
pet for the money. Choose from col
ors in Green, Beiqe, Grey, or Rose
during this annual February arpct
Event.
Reg. 5.50 NOW 44
Sq.Yd. ONLY t
A Real carpet value that any housewife will
be proud to own . . . and It's so easy to car
for . . . colors In brown and beige, charcoal
and pink, beige and qreen.
Re NOW
llsqYd ONLY 0
O88
iq.yif.
Beige & Brown Cotton Carpet
This outstanding beige and brown cotton car
pet is ideally suited to those with limited
budgets or those who want the family room
or children's room carpeted for extra warmth
and comfort.
Reg.
4 30
Sq.
.-Yd.
NOW
ONLY
3
44
the Bank of Klamath Falls
6th &
YOUR LOCALLY OWNED DRIVE-IN-BANK
Klomath
Ph. 4-3114
9x9
ROLL END VALUES
Grey tone-on-tone 204.40 100.00 104.00
9'x4"x15' ' Gr. tone-on-tone Wilton 296.20 185.00 111.20
9W.' Heavy cotton, Brown 131.40 95.00 36.40
12'x22' Plain Text. Champagne 451.65 295.00 159.65
12'x16'9" Heavy Axminster Beige 3C0.43 225.00 65.40
12V910" Aqua Textured Wool 410.70 265.00 145.70
12'x19'7" Cinnamon Text. Wool 404.70 295.00 109.70
12'x15'11" Wool Textured, Wheat 329.38 225.00 104.33
15 x1710" Grey-Brown Tweed 405.00 295.00 110.00
15'x17'5; Hvy. Wool Tweed, Beice 549.55 450.00 99.45
12'x44"' Multi-colored Leaf, Ax. 67.50 25.00 42.50
Discontinued Carpet Samples
4 Low Priced Groups
88c 1.19 3.88 - 4.88 5.88
1 LOT OF TOP QUALITY
Rubber R 34e c
Tile N0W 22a Va "eh
Vt fl I n
w i in bm v i r mm a
i