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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1958)
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE 3 A . . . CITY BRIEFS Bethel No. 6 Rcsular meeting of Job's Daughters. Bethel No. 6. will be Thursday, September 4, at 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple. There will be practice for officers Wednesday, September 3, at 9: 3D am Rummage Sale Pelican Auxili ary 1383 VKW will hold a rum mage sale Friday and Saturday. August 2:i and 30, at the VFW club, al5 Klamath Avenue. Hours are from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Molhersingers Klamath Coun ty PTA Molhersingers will meet tonight. August 28, at 7:30 in the Altamont Junior High music room. Rummage Wanted The Klam ath Falls Assembly No. 57, Order of Rainbow for Girls, will have a rummage sale September 5 and 6 at the Masonic Temple. Anyone wishing to donate rummage please phone TU 4-8816 or TU 4-6801. Square Dance The Merry Mix ers will have a square dance Fri day at 8 p.m. at the South Sixth Street Community Hall. All danc ers and visitors welcome. Ladies, please bring doughnuts. . Completes Training Michael J. Starr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Starr, 2528 Vine Avenue, recently completed his nine weeks recruit training at the Naval Training Cen ter, San Diego. Zuk'ima Nile Club members will hold a regular business meet ing and luncheon at 1 p.m. Wednesday, September 3, at the Willard Hotel. Edna Jones w serve as chairman. Out of town 'members call Madge McLaren at ; 1 U 4-4439 for reservations. Amcriran Legion Auxiliary will hold a rummage sale Friday and Saturday, August 29 and 30 in the Lesion Hall on North Eichth. For pickup call Elizabeth Peter- sterner TU 4-3898. Omitted The name of Ralph Lyon, Merrill, Future Farmer of America livestock exhibitor at the annual Junior Livestock Show was omitted from the report of the show and sale. Ralph won a first premium and an FFA grand champion ribbon on his entry. I -pP "IT "C.:) J $!hMr aft f&L I j vif & mm lMaWW.yUlala - i I DEDICATION SERVICES were held Sunday, August 24, at Malin upon completion of the new Christian Center at the Malin Migrant Labor Camp with numerous local groups taking part. The building to be used as a gathering place for Sunday School, family entertainment, and a day nursery for migrant workers was built by a group of young people and their leaders from the Westminster Fellowship of the First Presby terian Church, Stockton. Rear on the steps, are Bertril Shogren, Klamath Falls, left, and Burton Hoyle, Tulelake. Center, same order, Mrs. Everett Dennis, Klamath Falls, and Bill Kurtz, Merrill, building project chairman. Front row, left to right, Rev. Kent D. Lawrence, Portland, Migrant Ministry, Oregon Council of Churches Lynn McKnight, representing the Westminster Fellowship, First Presbyterian Church, Stockton, and Ross Ragland, Klamath Falls, president of the Klamath County Council of Churches. The work here was one of several Christian projects completed by young people of the Stockton Church without pay. Materials for the building were donated by local busi ness firms. Record Number Of Eniries In Dog Show A total of 407 dogs, the largest number ever entered in an AKC licensed all breed dog show in Klamath Falls, will be In competi tion on Saturday in the Klamath Dog Fanciers' ninth annual show, according to Kathy McDonald, president of the dog club There are several breeds listed in the official program which have never been shown previously in Sprinkles End 57-Day Drought PORTLAND (API Wednes day's sprinkles ended a 57-day drought in the city. The rain here totaled less than .01 of an inch, but the weather bureau recorded one-hundredth because lesser amounts are not listed. It was the longest dry spell here since 1926 when it didn't rain for 58 days. The record period with out rain in Fontanel was w days in 1925. City May Enter Power Business PORTLAND (AP) The City Council today considered a step aimed at putting Portland into the power business. The council was to decide whether to put on the November election ballot a charter amend ment that would permit Portland to float a 5Vi million dollar bond issue. The money would be used to build power generating facilities at the city's water storage dams in the Bull Run watershed. Klamath Falls. Mrs. McDonald, who has raised registered collies at her Kay-Mac Kennels here for many years, says the five smooth collies entered will be the first smooth collies seen here. They are expected from Pebble Ledge Ken nels of Cleveland, Ohio. There arc 16 Afghan hounds in this year's show, which is an un usually large number to appear in one competition, she says. Another rarity is the Rhodesion Ridgeback which is expected from Argentina. This will be the second time, Mrs. McDonald says, that Chesapeake Bay retrievers have been entered in the all breed show. Two are coming to Klamath Falls from Northern California. This year, for the first time, a local Norwegian elkhound has been entered. Mrs. John Meizner's Snee Court Takes Span Petition The County Court accepted Wednesday a petition urging con struction of a bridge across A Can al at the southern end of Hope Street. Harry Wiard. a civic leader of the South Suburban area, present ed the petition which he said bore 514 signatures. It seeks a bridge and a short extension of Vtiaid Street to meet the bridge approaches. County Engineer William R. Can ton said the county contemplates a bridge crossing at that point and that it has most of the right-of-way needed. He said the court still is discussing one plot of land be longing to Caroline Calvert of Bndgevillc, California, which stands in the needed right-of-way. Canton said the proposed 110 feet bridge would cost approxi mately $60,000, of which the county must provide $12,000. Federal lunds would provide the remain der, he said. The court also was notified that its request for rock and gravel pits on the Klamath Indian Reser vation, needed to maintain roads soon to be transferred to the coun ty, had been referred to the Bu reau of Indian Affairs in Wash ington. Soviet Russia, Red China Step-Up Anti-Tito Drive $25,000 Damage Action Filed TUNE IS APPROPRIATE By K. C. THALER I'nited Press International LONDON tl'Pl) Soviet Rus sia and Red China have stepped up their anti-Tito campaign in new concerted moves to assail Yugoslav revisionism from within and without. Yugoslav reports said Moscow has relused to supply wheat due under a long-standing agreement, despite the bumper harvest Rus sia is expecting this year. Red China in turn was reported to have canceled contracts for Yugoslav tobacco, an important export item in Belgrade s precari ous trade balance. Moreover, Peiping has carried the anti-Tito campaign into the very heart of Yugoslavia and, de- pite strong protests from the Bel grade government, has declined to halt its propaganda war inside Yugoslavia. The signs were that once again Red China was forcing the pace in the campaign against Belgrade with Russia fallowing suit. Several fresh developments have marked a new phase in flie cam paign which was foreshadowed by the official communique issued at the end of the Sino Russitin secret talks in Peiping some three weeks ago. In outright violation of diplomat ic privilege, the Red Chinese Em bassy in Belgrade has recently and printed in Peiping by the Chinese-Soviet Friendship Society, has been widely distributed recently throughout the country. Protests of the Belgrade govern ment in Peiping have apparently had no ell eel; this was held to reflect Peiping s determination to carry its campaign against revi sionism to the extreme. The pamphlets also contain re prints from attacks on Tito in the official Soviet press. This was seen as a calculated attempt of the Peiping regime to drag Rus sia into the quarrel more deeply ana to commit ner irrevocably, The reports also said Red China has cancelled contracts for Yugo slav tobacco, which would hurt tne country s economy that hasii been channelling much of its ex- j ports to Communist camp nations. 'i PORTLAND AP) A $25,000 suit was filed Wednesday against the Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles by a Portland man who said his driver's license was sus pended illegally. George H. Adams also charged in the suit that his automobile registration was suspended il legally. The damages were asked from the state department, James F. Johnson, its director, and Loren Kramer, its financial responsi bility chief. Dr. Posner Shoes For Children Popular Prieal ED'S SHOE SHOP 1022 Main been circulating: pamphlets in the PONTIAC, 111. tUPI) County Russian language inside Yugosla- Judge A. W. Tuesburg placed via which assailed Marshal Tito George McClellan, 24, on proba- for his independent socialist line, lion to the tune of "Don't Be Yugoslavia is being bluntly at Cruel" blaring from a carnival lacked in these pamphlets for its loudspeaker outside the courtroom alleged "treason" to the Commu window. ' nisi cause, and Tito for having al- "II was appropriate music but legedly "sold" the country for it won't apply if he violates this American dollars, probation." said the judge. The publication, named Druzba, AUCTION SALE BUILDINGS and EQUIPMENT September 4, 1958 at 11:00 A.M. Tha Oregon State Highway Commisiion will offer for tela at oral public auction a stare building knawn at the farmer Fre mont Grocery located at 1 8 Nevada Ave., Klamath Falls. Tha sale will be held September 4, 1958, at 11:00 a.m., on tha premises far the stare bldg., living quarters, and attached ga rage and trade fixtures cansisting of: twn Penguin self-service ceolers, one Albert-Ress self-service caeler, three smell wire dis play racks, one soft drink coaler, one Cemputing Scale, ona bread display rack, one Notianol Cash Register, ana small glass display rack and two junior service certs. (File 27989). BUILDINGS MUST BE REMOVED WITHIN 30 DAYS FROM THE DATE OF SALE. TERMS OF SALE: C.ih at lime of tale. The shove bulldinga and equip, turn! to be sold to the hlghvat bidder at public auction with tha rifht rr.rrvtd to accept or reject any or all bida. All of the bid prlra mut acrompany the aucceaifut bid. Consult your mover prior to the aala date. FOB INFORMATION: W. H. Maakln, Troperly Hfr., Slate Hwy. Dept., Kalem. Dronning Av Norge (Snow Queen of Norway) will be in competition with eight others. The three-year-old dog has not been shown pre viously. She boasts 25 champions in six generations n her mother's side and her papers go back four years on her sire's side. Norwe gian elktiounds were originally wild and have been traced to 4,000 to 5.000 years before Christ. The Nor wegian Hunters Association showed elkhounds for the first time in 1877. The British Elkhound Society was formed in 1923 and the breed has been recognized by the American Kennel Club since 1936. Doors open at the show at 8 a.m. and judging will start promptly at 3 a.m. Three judges will be judg ing most of the time in three rings so there will be plenty of activity to interest visitors to the show Dependable Coverage MAYFLOWER AUTO INSURANCE Reasonable Rates VERN W. EMLEY Office Phone 4-323K 2001 So. 6th KINDERGARTEN Ph. DEDRICK PRIVATE SCHOOL 4-4279 100S Pine STORE OPENS 9 A.M. (TO ROEBUCK AND CO. Spectacular Savings in a huge special purchase of Bulky Knit Sweaters 7n ROEBUCK AND CO. 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