Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 13, 1959, Page 8, Image 8

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    O
?AGE EIGHT
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. r
Fridav. Nnv. 13. 195!)
I
r r
BASIN BRIEFS
CAROL D. BAILEY
New Evangelist
Comes To Basin
Carol D. Bailey is the new
nanjclist servins the Church of
Chrisl, 1784 Arthur Street.
lie came to Klamath Kails ahnut
tix weeks ago from Senath, .Mis
foun. with his wife and three
young children, Caroline, 6, Bruce
3, and Jim, 6 months.
In addition to the usual morning
worship service, his duties include
a preaching service each Sunday
evening; mutual edification serv
ices, home Bible studies, supervis
ing young people's classes and visitation.
Vlkiring Parents Mr. and
.Mrs. Dick Coyncr are visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Coy-
nor, and his grandmother, Mrs.
Gray, Tulelake. Dick is sta
tioned at Hamilton Air Force
Base.
they were called by news of his
mother's illness. They received
word this week that Mrs. Jen
kins Sr. had died at her home
Monday, November 9.
From Rrdding Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas P. Fisher and family
To Missouri Mrs. W a 1 1 e rlspent the weekend in Fort Klam
ath with her mother, Mrs. Wesley
J. (Nellie) Smith.
Hulse, Newell, flew to Springfield
last week to visit her parents, Mr
and Mrs. J. II. Manning. Her trip
was marred by an accident in
San Francisco when one wing of
the plane was damaged in take
off. The passengers had to trans-
ler to another plane.
Former Resident of Newell,
Louis Ablaard, accompanied by
Dewayne Schultz, are hunting
guests in the Newell area. They
are also visiting Mrs. Ablaard's
parents, the Frank Dobsons of
Tulelake. Both men are from Tor
rence. j
Hunting Guests at the Wcs
St. Peter home, Newell, are Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Roach and
son, John, and Everett Johnson,
Long Beach; Mr. and Mrs. French
Fredricks, Pasadena; Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Neff, Napa.
Conference
Scheduled
A missionary conference will he-
gin at the Free Methodist Church
November 13 and will continue
through Sunday, November 15
with Miss Beryl Ring as mission
ary speaker. Services will start at
7:M p.m. except Sunday.
The women s Missionary Soci
ety of Ihe church will be in charge
ef the Friday service; the inter
mediate age group Saturday night.
At all services Sunday, Sunday
School at D:45 a.m., worship serv
ices at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m., empha
sis Will be on missions. Miss Ring
will show slides at the evening
tervice. The public Is invited to
all services.
Church Plans
Observance
"Men and Missions" Siuulav wi
be observed November 15 during
me morning worship hour at 11
m. at the Free Methodist
Church, jflHi Oregon Avenue.
Men of Ihe church will assist in
presenting the work of foreign
missions sponsored by the denom
ination on 22 fields. A total of Uli'i
Free Methodist congregations in
Ihe United Stales and Canada
re expected to cooperate by ob
serving this day.
Many of the churches overseas
will on the same day give their
offerings for world missions. In
ome countries this will be pro
duce, peanuts, rice, chickens and
corn meal. The goal for North
American churches is five cents
per day per member. All are in
vited to share Ihe inspiration or
this significant day.
Newell Visitors M. L. White
of Alhambra is visiting his daugh
ter and family. Mr. and Mrs. John
Cross, Newell. Mrs. White will
join him here Thanksgiving week.
Annual Ravioli and chicken
dinner served by the Tulelake
Presbyterian Church Guild will be
held on the opening day of Cali
fornia pheasant season Saturday,
November 14. Serving will start
at 5:30 p.m. in the multipurpose
room of Ihe Tulelake Elementary
School. The family style dinner is
open to the public with a special
invitation to hunters to come as
they are.
Washington Visitors for a few
days recently at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Alonzo (Stub) Jones in
Fort Klamath were her sister and
family, Mrs. Ruth Shaw and sons,
Brewster, Washington.
Moved Mr. and Mrs. Neil
Neilson and daughter, Karmen,
moved last week from Fort Klam
ath to Chiloquin. Neilson is em
ployed at the Johns - Manville
plant.
Houseguests Mr. and Mrs.
Ord Pritchctt, former Fort Klam-
alhilcs now living at Swan Lake,
were overnight guests last Tues
day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Corona at the Hawkins Cattle
Company ranch south of Fort
Klamath. The Coronas subsequent
ly moved lo Ihe Hawkins ranch
at llollistcr, California, until next
spring.
Returned Mr. and Mrs. Gar
ence Jenkins and daughters re
turned recently to Fort Klamath
after a trip to Fort Worth where
Social Hour will be held at
the Tulelake High School Mon-
uay, novemoer le, at 8 p.m. in
the cafeteria. Parents are invited
to come and meet all the teach
ers. Five of the teachers are new
to Tulelake this year.
Mother Vlsid Visiting her
son and family, the Fred Robi-
sons of Newell, is Mrs. Gladys
Robison of La Habia, California.
Home For Weekend Sandra
Perry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver Perry, Newell, was home
for the weekend from her studies
at Good Samaritan Hospital, Port
land.
Trip To San Francisco Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Reynolds, Tulelake.
left recently to spend a few days
in San Francisco.
Reno Trip A large group of
Tulelake and Newell ' residents
chartered a bus and spent last
weekend in Reno.
Newell Brownies enjoved a
skating party recently at the Ma-
lin Rink. Families of the girls
also attended.
Rummage Sale Butte Valley
Women's Club will have a rum
mage sale Friday and Saturday,
November 20 and 21, in the Peli
can Theater Building. Hours Fri
day are from 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m. and
from 9 a.m. until sold out on Sat
urday. Money will be used lor a
nurse's scholarship and other
youth work.
- 'I "m
V ill
I"
New Chief Of Steel Uijion Rose From Bottom Ranks
LLOYD ALDRICH
Representative
To Give Address
A visiting minister, Lloyd Al-
drich, from New World headquar
ters, Brooklyn, New York, a rep
resentative of the Watchtowcr So
ciety will address the public on a
I'nited Presi International
Leslie B. Worthington was an
immigrant boy who first tasted
hard work in the grimy coal
mines of southern Illinois.
He capped his rags-to-riches
rise to the top Tuesday by be
coming president and chief ad
mimstrative officer of I'nited
Slates Steel, the world's biggest
steel maker,
Worthinglon's presidential office
in Pittsburgh is a far cry from
the paintless family home in tiny
Wilt, 111., where he spent his boy
hood.
Worthington, now 57, was
years old when his coal miner
father brought his family from
England to the United States.
The boy worked in the town's
general stoic during his grammar
school days and joined the union
during high school to help his fa
ther eke out a meager living from
the dirty, dangerous coal mines.
Worthington worked his way to
a bachelor s degree from the Uni
versity of Illinois in 1923, then be
gan his 30-year trip to the presi
dency by joining a U.S. Steel sub
marjed the first time a president
had bgen cjjosen from the sales
corps.
Worthington has beca married
for 31 years to Dorothy Helen
Rice, a University of Chicago
graduate he met while a sales ap
prentice.
One of their sons Paul Les
lie, 23 is following in his fa
ther's footsteps as a Tj.S. Steel
sales trainee in Pittsburgh,
their other son John Rice
is a Chicago attorney.
timely subject, "Walking Wisely sidiary in Chicago as a sales ap-
m a Wicked World." at Kingdom prentice.
Hall, 833 North Ninth Street, at
3 p.m. Sunday, November 15.
Following this service at 4:15
p.m. there will be a study in the
Watchtowcr Magazine. "Finding
the Truth That Makes Men Free.'
The public is invited to attend.
Ko collections are taken.
SOUND FAILURE
HAMILTON AIR FORCE, Calif.
(UPI) The Air Force, which
has jarred the San Francisco Bay
area on several occasions with
sonic booms, scheduled one Mon
day for a speed and space symposium.
Two F-lOls raced across the
sky at supersonic speeds and-
nothing happened.
He became assistant manager
of sales for the subsidiary in 193.'),
was appointed manager of the St.
Paul district sales office in 1935.
spent five years at the Detroit
sales office and went to Pitts
burgh as sales manager for bar,
strip and semi-finished materials
for Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp,
Worthington came back to Chi
cago in 1912 as vice president of
U.S. Steel's supply division. He
became division president in 1946,
a job he held until 1957, when he
was appointed president of the
firm s Columbia-Geneva Steel Di
vision in San Francisco.
His appointment Tuesday
See modern-day
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Yogi Bear
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-LIVING SOUND'
HEARING AIDS
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OPTOMETRIST
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71S Main TU 4-8322
THINKS OF RETIREMENT
NEW YORK (UPI) - Helen
Hayes, first lady of Ihe Broad
way stage, indicated Wednesday
she may retire from the theater.
Turning down a Broadway role
in the comedy "A Adventure,"
she said in a telegram to the au
thor, James P. Davis, "I've
thought and prayed over this but
I don't want to commit myself to
yours or any other play until I've
come to yearn again for work i
which may be never."
"I've talked of retiring for a
long time," her telegram said.
"It may just he I've finally made
it without knowing it."
TRADE
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Appliances
Furniture
Tools or what have you
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or
McGaughey's Trading
House
TU 2-4893
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Oh B
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the THERMADOR A TWINS
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