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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1958)
MONDAY. DECEMBER 1, 1S58 PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON t I 1 P TU. tag. 114. tL ON - ''Marge doesn't think about boys ALL the time. Sometimes she doesn't think!" Chief Issues New Pledge To Red-Threatened City AUGUSTA. Ga. (APt Communist-threatened West Berlin has a new plcdce from President Kisen hnwer that its freedom will be safeguarded by the United States. The pledge thai the United States intends to meet that re sponsibility, shared by Britain and France, was reaflirmed by the President alter he and Secre tary of Stale Dulles discussed the Berlin situation at an hour lony conference Sunday. They talked at the AiiRU-sla Na tional Goll Club as Eisenhower made plans to end his working vacation Tuesday and fly back to Washington. His 13-day visit start ed Nov. 20. Back in the capital the Presi dent will face the task of com pleting the legislative program and the federal budget he will tend to the new Congress in Jan uary. Eisenhower and Dulles almost certainly discussed countermeas urcs the Western Allies plan to take to keep the Soviet Union from dominating West Berlin. But they kept mum afterward about the strategy. In a brief statement alter the meeting Dulles said: "The Presi dent reiterated our government's Little Rock Superintendent Retires Without Any Plans LITTLE ROCK, Ark. lUPIl -Virgil T. B.ossom. one of the key figures in the integration crisis, wound up six years Sunday as su perintendent of the Little Rock School District. He has no immediate plans. He would not say today if he planned to slay in Little Rock or Arkan (as. or would try In get a school administrative job in another itate. Blossom was author of the grad ual integration plan that touched olf the racial crisis in September, 1037. Nine Negro students tried to crash the color harrier in Central High School. They were turned hack by Arkansas National Guardsmen on orders of Gov. Or val E. Faubus. Laler. they into jralrd the school under protection of units of Hie crack tntst Air borne Division sent to Little Rock by President Eisenhower. At meeting last Nov. 12, the Royal Family Denies Story LONDON (APi-The royal lam lly has denied a newspaper slnry that Queen Mother Elizabeth has been getting lips on Ihe future from an Irish crystal gazer. The Sunday Pictorial said the mothsaycr was Tom Cornell, 4t, from Tippcrary, who used to do his gazing in night clubs. The slory said he regularlv visited the Queen Mother's residenre, Clar ence House, lo read Ihe crystal hall Inr her . The lunrr cnxriil ll.ul I Im I Mt year-old Qu.cn Mother wanted to know ahout Princess Marga ret s lulure. particularly her mar riage prospects. ". . .The story concerning Ihe crystal gazrr visiting Queen Eliz abeth I lie Queen Mother at Clar ence House is untrue.'' said the denial from Buckingham Palace. Royal denials formerly never were issued and still are ex tremely rare. The laM was in May, when the palace denied that Princess Margaret would become engaged lo Peter Townsend, Ihr divorced air hero whose loc she renounced in litsj. Callers at Cornell's aparlmenl in the Westminster section o( Lon don were told he was away and 11 was not known when he would return. The Sunday Pictorial said he had refu.sed to comment on the reported sessions with Ihe Queen jlollicr or on hints thai he has ''an even more Important client." ; "Crystal gaiers. like doctors, (lave I code of ethics." he was Quoted as saying " ACTOR WES LONDON i.P Garrlh Jones. 35, plavfd Ihe part of a man with weak heart in a television play Sunday night. Midway through the performance he collapsed with a ,..!( attack and died in his dress- heart attack and firm purpose that the United States will not enter into any ar rangement or embark on any course of conduct which would have the ellect of abandoning the responsibilities which the United States, with Great Britain and France, has formally assumed for the freedom and security of the people of West Berlin." That in cited was a fresh re jection of The Soviet Union's Thanksgiving Day proposal lor crcaliton of a demilitarized "tree' city of West Berlin. Moscow at the same time declared void the lour-power occupation agreement! tor Berlin which was reached alter World War II. The Soviet note on its plan gave the western powers six months to enter into negotiation for estab lishment of a Irce city. The Rus sians added that failure to do so would put the plan into elfecl au tomatically at the end of that period. The swilt U.S. reaction was dial Russia was proposing to keep its grip on East Berlin and have the western allies abandon their rights in West Berlin. The Stale Department sain the end result of the plan would he to surrender West Berlin to hos tile domination. school board agreed lo buy up Hie remainder of Blossom's contract lor $19,741. The contract extend ed through June 30, I960. At the same meetinc. fixe of the six hoard members resigned, They said they had been caught between Ihe federal courts on one h?nd and Ihe slate government and local segregation sentiment on Ihe other. The members described their position as one of "utter hopelessness, helplessness and frustration." The day alter Ihe board meet ing, a judge granted a temporary injunction in a taxpayers suit, en joying the district trom payment of the remainder of Blossom's contract. No hearing has been scl lo make the injunction permanent. Blossom is expected lo contest Ihe case. Blossom was al his desk Friday as usual, and planned to return today if any work was to be linishrd. Meanwhile. Ihe school district will operate for the lime being without a school board and under divided authority. A new hoard will be chosen by the voters at a Dec. 6 school elec tion. The cily's four public high .xhools failed lo open last Septem ber. . and only Ihe elementary schools are operating normally. The approximate 3,700 white and Negro high school students have 'ransferred lo oilier districts lliroiicboul the stale and nation. are attending private schools, or are scholaslically idle. The only member of Ihe school board who did not resign was Dr. Dale Allord. who was elected to Congress in a whirlwind write-in I'alDPalCn iast NOV. 4. Hp IS all outspoken segrcgalionisl. and de feated "moderate" Rep. Brooks Hays D-Ark.) of Little Rock Quakes Jolt California LOS ANGELES (,P Five earthquakes jolted Southern Cali fornia Sunday night from Los An geles to the Mexican border 180 miles away. Only one of Ihe quakes did any damage hut the scries of sharp jolts shook up thousands of resi dents in three counties. Hardest hit was Calexico. on the Mexican border in Imperial Coun ty. Plaster fell from Ihe ceiling of a market, windows 'were shattered and canned goods turn hied from the shelves. No one was injured. Ten minutes later a much light er ouake was felt In Los Angeles Over the next few hours three allershocks from the border quake set the earth trembling along the geological faults running through the area. More altershocks are ex pei ted. Coastal communities from San Diego to San Clen-enle a 60-mile Kingsley Field IContinurd from Page 1) was killed over Eevle. Philippine Islands, in lfi45. McGuire Air 1-orcc Base. New Jersey, was named in his honor. Preddy Avenue Maj. George E. Preddy was the eishth ranking t'SAF ace and the lirst European Theater pilot to shoot down six German planes in one day. lie crashed to his death on Christmas Day of 11)44 during a spectacular dogfight over Belgium in which he downed two ME-Kitls. Preddy officially has 23.8 kills in air-to-air combat and was a veteran combat pilot of both the Pacfic and European theaters. ' Wright Avenue The Wright Brothers, Orville and Wilbur, arc credited with the invention of the airplane. The epic flight at Kilty Hawk. North Carolina, on Decem ber 17. 1M3. climaxed centuries of eflort by man to conquer the air. To the future it bequeathed the new era of oirpowcr that was des tined to revolutionize travel and exploration within the brief span of half a century. j Vincent Drive Brig. Gen. Clin-i Inn D. Vincent graduated Irom the! United States .Military Academy in I'UB. He served with the famed Flying Tigers in Asia, and laler became commanding general of the Iceland Base Command; and the 23th Air Division. Everett. Wash ington. General Vincent was vice commander of Western Air Defense Force prior to his death in 1!I36. Weslbrook Drive Lt. Col. Robert B. Weslbrook was the 24th rank ing USAF ace, and the top ace ol the 13th Air Force with 20 air- to-air victories. He was killed in action in the Philippine Islands on November 22, HI44. Schilling Circle Col. David C. Schilling was the 12th ranking USAF ace with 22'i air-to-air vie lories. He won the Harmon Trophy in 1!I3I, and the Mackay Trophy in 11153. Killed in an accident in England in August MI3B. Schilling Air Force Base, Kansas, was named in his honor. Davis Street Lt. Col. George . Davis Jr. was the 17th ranking USAF ace with 21 air-to-air victo ries. A congressional .wcaai oi Honor winner. Colonel Davis was killed in action in Korea in 1M2 while flying his 60th Korean conv bat mission. Car Plunges; Sailor Injured Apparently only one ol five sail ors was seriously injured Sunday night when Ihe car in which they were riding went into the canal four miles north of Worden. Charles B. Adams. 18. Orofino. Idaho, sustained head lacera tions that made him the most se riously injured of the victims. How ever, he was reporledly "doing all right" at Klamath Valley Ilos pilal Monday morning. The accidrnt occurred when driv er Arthur C. Kintcr, 21, Eugene, lost control of the car after a tire blew out. The southbound machine rolled over on Highway !I7 and went into the canal, coming to rest on its top. The men managed lo make their way out of the car and were taken by a passing mo- torist to the local hospital Kinler sustained a shoulder in jury which did not appear lo be serious, but X-rays were planned for Monday morning, hospital au thorities reported. An identical re port was made on James A. Shcl ton, 18, Yamhill. Joseph G. Cicsicl- ski. 24. Peru, Illinois, was appar ently only bruised, and Robert A. I.pfflcr. 20. Scio, was held only for observ ation. The Navy men were headed hack lo their ship in San Francisco w hen the accident occurred. Traffic Aide Predicts Toll CHICAGO (API - A safety ex pert today predicted Irallic acci dents will cost 50.000 lives in IHtiB unless efleclivc action is taken. Henry J. Hoeller, assistant gen oral manager of Ihe National Salcly Council, also slated that the annual toll eight years hence could include t.flOO.OOO injuries and an economic loss of seven billion dollars. Hoeffer noted, for comparison, that Iratlic latalitics numbered 38.500 last year. ou will be shocked lo hear, he said, "that 1,081.600 people lost their lives as traffic fatalilies be tween Jan. 1. 1923. and Jan. 1. 1338." Hoeller spoke al a meeting of Midwestern legislators sponsored by the President's Committee (or Tfallic Safety and the Counciol State Governments. It is being conducted by Ihe Trallic Institute of Northwestern University. KRASSY. BLONDE CARS LONDON I fl U.S. indus trial designer Henry Dreyluss. writing in the British business and industry montlfly Scope, let it he known that he does not approve of American automobile design. American cars are viiigar and monotonous. They're like Ihe leg endary brassy blonde. She's pret ty dazzling for the first live min utes, but then you're embarrassed In be seen with her, he said. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch Yrk. N. T. (V.i.t - For the nrst time trienea has fotind a new healing substance with the avton l?hinR ability to shrink hemor rhoids, stop itching, and relieve pain without surgery. In eae after ease, while fently relieving pain, actual reduction I shrinkage took place. Mst amaunc of all-results were. o thorough that sufferers ma1e MRS. DORA STONE Dora Stone Rites Slated Funeral services for Mrs. Dora Alice Stone, who died in Hillside Hospital November 2ft (ollowing a week s illness, will be held Irom the chapel of Ward's Klamath Fu neral Home at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, December 2. The Rev. Hugh Bron son, former Klamath Falls pastor, now filling the pulpit of the Glen- dale, Oregon, Presbyterian Church and a close friend of the family, will officiate. Final riles ano interment will be in Klamath Memorial Park. Mrs. Stone. 77, was in good health until her last illness. She made her home alone at 2358 Shasla Way. She was a member of the First Christian Church, and had made her home in Klamath Falls for 21 years. Surviving are five daughters, Mrs. Sybil Fowler, Ford, Kansas, here for the services, Mrs. Bee Book, cafeteria operator at the Herald and News, this city, Mrs. Karmyl Smith. Mrs. Lois Brown field. Klamath Falls, and Mrs. Eiva McGuire. Eugene; three sons. Clillord. Floyd and Dcloiar, Klam ath Falls: one sister. Mrs. Zelma Cavin of Wakita. Oklahoma: one brother. Emert Beauchamp. Nick erson. Kansas: 16 grandchildren and seven great grandchildren. Funerals SHIRLEY Funeral services for Dollie Mar tin Shirley, 64. who died in this city November 28. will be held in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel Tues day, December 2. at 2 p.m.. the Rev. . Otis Bell officiating. Inter ment will be made in Klamath Memorial Park. STONE Funeral services for Dora Alice Stone. 77, who died here November 20, will take place from the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home on Tuesday, December 2, at 1:30 p.m., with Ihe Rev. Hugh Bronson of Ihe Glendale, Oregon, Presby terian Church officiating. Conclud ing services and interment will fol low in Klamath Memorial Park. FURNACE PORTLAND i API A defective furnace was believed by firemen to have caused a fire that swept through a wcslside Portland man sion Saturday, causing an esti mated $100,000 damages. John II. Crawford, co-owner of the Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. and owner of the home, was in Walla Walla. Wash., with his family for the Thanksgiving holiday at the time. At Least Thirty-Two Die On California Highways SAN FRANCISCO lUPH - At east 32 persons were killed on Calilornia highways during the long Thanksgiving holiday week end, Ihe slate again leading the nation in the number of auto deaths in the four-day period. From 6 p.m. Wednesday until midnight Surday, 17 deaths oc curred in Southern Calilornia and 15 in Ihe northern part of Ihe state, including five in Ihe San Joaquin Valley area. Deaths in California included: Dorothy Jane Wilson. 23. San Louis Obispo, killed Sunday night when her small foreign car col lided head-on with another car on Highway 101 near King City. Her sister. Mary Sue. 19. was severely injured The victims, believed to be stu dents at San Jose State, collided villi a car containing five students ;it Cat Poly. Most serious injured was Glenn Mork. Hayward. who sullcred head injuries. The others were identified as Robert J. Alios. 20. Santa Rosa, the driver: Joseph Price. 25. New York City; James Lanier. 20, Se hastapol: and Gene Barnes, 18. Hayward. They were taken to King City Hospital. Robert Dewey Bruce. 18. of Or land, was killed cany Sunday when the car he was riding in col lided head on with another car on Highway 99V three miles south of Woodland. Frankie Vierra, 13. Auburn, was Relieves Pain astonishing statements HVe "Piles have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing sub stance ( Bio-Dyne" i discovery of a nftrM-famous research institute. This substance is new available in fpottry or amfment form under the) name Vrtpttrntitn H At year druggist. Money back guarantee. Rev- U. S. Pat. Of. Eleven Oregonians Killed In Holiday Mishap Series By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon's long Thanksgiving holi day was a grim one for 11 per- ons. They were killed in a wide pread scries of water, traffic, hunting and home accidents. The six trallic victims pushed the November toll to 45 the sec ond highest monthly total of the Obituaries cox LAKEVIEW Vern Jay Cox, 67, died in Lakeview November 28. Mr. Cox was born December 20. 18!0, at Harlan, Kentucky. His wife preceded him in death June 16, 1941. He is survived by four sons. Lloyd. Gene and Dan of Lakeview, and Willie of Alturas: two daugh ters. Mrs. Dale Mahan, Klamath Falls, and Mrs. Harold Wilson. Lakeview; three brothers. Ernest J. Cox, Medtord. William Cox. Crescent City, and Benner, Grants Pass: two sisters. Mrs. Frank Hearst and Mrs. Jess Jones,, both of Medford; also 23 grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at Ouslcy Osterman Chapel at 2 p.m. Tuesday. December 2. Burial in the Westside Cemetery. The Rev. Gordon Griffin will officiate. STOLL LAKEVIEW - Kenneth Stoll, 62, died in Lakeview November 30. Mr. Stoll was born at Leadville. Colo rado, May 28, 1896, and was mar ried April 4, 1931, at Vancouver to Audra Laird, who survives. He is also survived by one daughter, Sharon M. Michaclson. Lakeview. and one grandson. Terry Eugene .Vichaelson. Mr. Stoll had been distributor for the Shell Oil Com pany since he came to Lakeview in 1939. He was a member of the Episcopal Church. Lakeview Cham ber of Commerce, Lions Club. Elks, Masons, Lake County Shrine Club and the American Legion. He was a veteran of World War I. Funeral services will be held at St. Luke's Episcopal Church at 11 a.m. Tuesday, December 2. with the Rev. H. N. Tragitt Jr. of Bish op. California, officiating. Crema tion at the Portland Crematorium. Friends who wish to contribute to his memory may do so to the Shrine Hospital. WITHERS LAKEVIEW Chester Lawrence Withers. 81, native of Paisley, died in Lakeview November 29. He was born March 9. 1877, nine miles north of Paisley and had lived in the area all his life. Mr. Withers was- married at Paisley June 6. 1917, to Irene Holbrook, who sur vives him. He is also survived by one daughter. Mary Harrison, of Whittier, California, and two grand sons. Mr. W'thers was a member of A.F. and A.M. No. 86. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, December .3, at the Paisley School Auditorium with bu rial in the Paisley Cemetery, the Rev. Claude Brown officiating. Ous lcy Osterman Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. Friends may contribute to the Lake County Disaster Unit in his memory. QUENEI.L LAKEVIEW Mrs. Flora Quenell, 69, who was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, November 22, 1889, died in Lakeview November 30. She was married lo Albert R. Que nell in 1909 in Tennessee. He pre ceded her in death in 1923. Mrs. Quenell had lived in Lakeview since 1930. Survivors include two sons. Lawrence Quenell of Lake- view, and Allen C. Quenell of Port land: also seven grandchildren. Fu neral services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday, December 3. at Ous ley Osterman Chapel with burial in Sunset Park Cemetery. killed Sunday night in a head-on collision in Placer County near Newcastle. He was a passenger in a pickup truck. Previously reported holiday fa taiities in Northern California in eluded Michael D. Kctchum, 22 Eureka: an unidentified San Fran Cisco man; Andy W. Wilson, 54 Menlo Park: Robert Rice, 51, Oakr land: Gus T. Helm, 63. Seattle Phyllis Smith. 40, Larkspur: and Mrs. viona Meyer, 34, Sacramen to. Darrel Astin, 14, San Jose news paper carrier, died Sunday of in juries suffered when he was hit by a car on his paper route Fri day morning. The accident took place in Campbell. FINAL CLOSEOUT OF '58 MODELS DISCOUNTED FOR CASH 1 Only Brother Sewing Machine with tig zqg attachment ... $ aa 95 Woi $129.93 NOW 77 1 Only Pace Setter Free Arm $ OCO 'S Woi $339.95 NOW tD7 1 Only Deluxe Stainlesi Steel Top BLACKSTONE AUTOMATIC DRYER $100 95 Woi $289.95 NOW I 77 1 Only Blackitone Auto. Dryer $ 1 r ft 95 Woi $219.95 NOW 107 1 only Blackitone Auto. Waiher $ QQ 95 Woi $279.95 NOW I 07 Uied Sewing Machines From $7,50 to $29.95 BROTHER SEWING & APPLIANCE MART 345 E. Moin TU 4-6404 year. The l!s toiai siooa ai in. The holiday's first victims were ccorded shortly alter the start of the four-day weekend Thurs day evening. Mrs. Evelyn Foss, 52, Coos Bay. was killed in a headon collision near Creswell. and Kenneth Cruickshank, 21. Bend, perished j as his car veered off a highway near Redmond. There were two victims Friday. Harry Van Alst. 22, was killed by carbon monoxide lumes as he worked on his car in his garage in Portland. Car repair work also led to the death of Eugene Lowden, 19. crushed beneath a car that slipped from a jack as he worked on the vehicle near his Wilder vibe home. The loll rose steeply Saturday. Otis E. Johnston. 46. and his son. Wayne. 16. both of Portland, perished when their boat sank as they hunted ducks in the Colum bia River. Near Seaside, Thomas Keller, 16, Gales Creek, was wounded as he hunted elk. Keller, president of the senior class at Forest Grove High, died Saturday night at a Forest Grove hospital. Traffic accidents also claimed several persons Saturday. Mrs. Elzora .Aldrich was struck and killed by a car alter she stepped off a bus in Gresham. Near Eugene, a headon crash killed Martha Minklcr, 14, Oak ridge, and injured several other persons. Another Saturday night victim was Frank C. Learning, 52. Cen tral Point, killed as two cars col lided near Medford. A headon crash near Cannon Reach Sunday took the iife of a Portland carpenter. He was Wil liam Melrose. 60. The November total became the second worst of the year in the state. In The Associated Press tabulation. Evangelist Plans Address Tonight The Rev. James Lempz, a world eosDel mission evangelist and ra dio program director, is to speak- tonight at the Lakeside Nazarene Church, Quarry and Acosta, start ing at 7:30. The date was previ ously given as Sunday. Rev. Lempz has just completed a three-month tour of the Middle East and has appeared before con gregations at some of the largest camp meetings and in Christian colleges. Also to be present is Rev. Les ter Moore, state Holiness Associa tion president. The speaker is ap pearing under sponsorship of this group. The public is cordially in vited to hear this speaker. California Weather United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Mostly fair today; cloudy tonight and Tuesday; little change in tem perature: high today 63-69; low to night 42-50; gentle winds; rain pos sibility 10 per cent today and 20 per cent tonight and Tuesday. Mt. Shasta - Siskiyou area: Cloudy today and tonight with chance of occasional rain; partly cloudy Tuesday; little change in temperature. Sierra Nevada: rair today and in southern ranges tonight and Tuesday; considerable high cloudk ness northern ranges tonight and Tuesday; little change in temper ature. Sacramento Valley: Considerable high cloudiness through Tuesday little change in temperature: high both days 63-69: low tonight 37- 44: gentle winds. Northwestern California: Con siderable cloudiness through Tues day: occasional light rain near coast from about Fort Bracg northward and in extreme north ern interior today and early to night; little change in tempera ture; high today and low tonight Napa 70-38: Ukiah 67-40, Santa Rosa 70-40: coastal winds souther ly 15-30 m.p.h. Cape Mendocino northward and variable 10-15 m.p.h. elsewhere. How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place Do your false teeth annoy and em bums by iltpplng. dropping or wob bling when you eat, liuich or talk? Just sprinkle a little PASTEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powder holds false teeth more firmly and more comfortably. No mimmy, ftooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not sour. Checks "plst odor"' (denture breatht. Get PASTEETH today at any drug counter. (WW"1- Vcc -PH? III l P i $r: , I 47 A SKETCH of Jesse Applegate drawn by a nephew 20 umm after hie daafh. Historians Seek Photo The history committee of t h e Oregon centennial issued an SOS today, asking anybody who has a photograph ol Jesse Appiegaie. an Oregon pioneer, to report the fact to the committee. Malcolm Clark, chairman of the history committee, explained that the committee is having a scries of cartoons and biographical sketches made ready (or use in Oregon newspapers in the centennial year, 1959. Clark said: "We have found a photograph of each subject to be discussed in the series except Ap plegate. The only likeness we have been able to find of him is a sketch drawn by a nephew 20 years after his death. Centennial headquarters are at 400 Jackson Tower, Portland. Jesse Appiegaie was one of three brothers who moved to Oregon in 1843, and he was a leader of a column of 900 settlers who crossed the plains that year. He established larm in what is now western Polk County, built a mill, worked as a surveyor and surveyed Ihe site of Oregon City and in 1846 had a share in opening the Apple gate trail to Southern Oregon., He was a member of the legis lative committee of the provisional government in 1845 and influential in shaping the development of Ore gon as a territory in 1849. He also was a member of the stale con stitutional convention in 1857. Applegate died in 1888 at the age of 77. FURNITURE DISTRIBUTION LA GRANDE (API M. Gale nf Beals. ecneral manager of iho mi. cmiiy Lumber Co., said Sat urday the firm n ans lo rlisirihnin 10,000 pieces of unpainted furni ture next Vear Ihrnnoh fl,o I,',.. ipasi, calilornia and Oregon. FREE HEARING CLINIC The Dahlberg Company, makers of the world'i fin est and most complete line of electronic hospitol equipment and quality hearing aids, announces the first in a regular series of free hearing clinics. FEATURING Free minor repairs and adjustments for oil types of aids. Complete battery supply. Factory troined hearing consultants. No cost or obligation for tests and advice on your hearing problem. ASK ABOUT THE ALL NEW DAHL BERG HEARING AID THAT IS WORN ENTIRELY AT THE EAR. Mod possible by o modern miracle, the transistor. HEAR IN BOTH EARS This tiny miracle gives the clearest, most natural hearing, possible. Wonderful for nerve deafness, which ii the most common cause of hearing prob lem!. Defiei detection with iti tiny, contoured liic. Natural, ear level hearing. Hear the direction from which sound it coming. ABSOLUTELY NO CORDS OR GADGETS TO CONFUSE YOU. Winema Hotel - Klamath Falls Wednesday - December 3 Hours: 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. 4 ' v v A Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours lo 4:30 a.m. Monday Max. Min. Prep, Raker 44 31 Bend 58 40 Eugene 63 45 - Lakeview 53 27 .Medford 48 33 Newport 61 46 .07 North Bend 60 51 Pendleton 43 29 T Portland Airp't -51 46 .06 Redmond 61 46 Itoseburg .. 60 46 Salem 58 45 .06 Eastern Oregon Considerable cloudiness through Tuesday with few showers likely in extreme north: mild. Highs 56-58; low to night 28-38. Western O r e g o n Occasional showers and brief periods of nar lial clearing through Tuesday, except little or no precipitation in extreme south; continued mild. Highs 54-62; low tonight 40-48. Coastal winds southerly to south westerly, decreasing to 10-25 m.p.h. tonight and Tuesday. Northern Oregon beaches- Occasional rain and rather windy through Tuesday. Beach winds southerly to southwesterly, 15-25 m.p.h., decreasing slightly ny Tuesday. Temperature range 52- 62. Grants Pass and vicinity- Considerable cloudiness with morning fog and smoke Tuesday. Highs 58-63; low tonight 38-42. Baker-La Grande area Consid erable cloudiness with a few showers through Tuesday. Highs 43-48; low tonight 28-33. Gassy? 3 Times Faster Relief eertifltd laboratory tisti prsvt BEll-HM tablet! ntutnilit 3 timet i much itomici icidity In ent mtnutt m many liadlnf dlfttifivt libllti. Cat Btll-ANS today for the faitatt known rellaf, 3e at druciitta. Send poital to BELl-ANS, ) anteburi, H. t. (or liberal frea tamplt. J Jug room I stt etch felt the tremors.