Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1960)
Friday. January 22. mfiO Mrs. Bunnell Rites Held CITY BRIEFS HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. William D. A. Bruley, 17, Army private, son of .Mr. and Mrs. George A. Bruley, Klamath Falls, completed Nike-Ajax missile crew men training January 15 at Fort Bliss, Texas. Bruley, a reserve, is on six-monlhs ot active duty. Dr. William Holford will speak at capping ceremonies for the Li censed Practical Nurses Chapter at 8 p.m. January 30 in the First Christian Church. The public is Invited. , Midland Grange youth, their families and friends, will hold a bowling party at Lucky Lanes Saturday, January 23, at 8 p.m Henley Grange will sponsor a New March of Dimes card party Saturday, February 6, at 8 p.m. in the grange hall. The public is invited. Clara Fink will conduct an or ganizational meeting for adult sew ing clauses Monday, January 25, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 115 at the high school. For more information call TU 4-7470 on the weekend or the vocational office, TU 4-7595, during the week. Paul C. Williams, Marine priv ate first class, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde H. Williams, 5131 South Sixth Street, is serving with the Third Marine Division on Oki nawa. Girl Scouts will hold their regu lar monthly sing tonicht (Friday ) from 7 to 9 at Mills School. Please use Orchard Street entrance. A VFW Dance will be held Sat urday, January 23, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. to the music of Louie and Ozzics' orchestra for mem bers and invited guests. Person nel from Kingsley Field especial ly invited. Oldtiniers Dance will be held at KC Hall, Saturday, January 23, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. to good music. Sharon Lantz, 16, of 1912 Wiard Street, fell while ice skating at Moore Park Wednesday evening, January 20, and was admitted to Klamath Valley Hospital for treatment of head injuries. Her condition was called good Thurs day morning. Sally Robinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Robinson, 2030 Van Ness Avenue, left January 21 for Riverside, California, where she will attend Riverside City Col lege. She will major in drafting, minor in business machine oper ation and office administration. Mary Martha Circle of Jmman uel Baptist Church will meet Tues day, January 26, at 7 p.m. at the church for installation of new officers. Secret sisters will be re vealed and others drawn. AH in terested women of the church are invited. Mrs. Ray Wood, who recently had emergency major surgery in Portland, has returned to her home at ' 1724 Riverside Drive. She may have visitors. Eva Burkhaltcr, mathematics Instructor at Klamath Union High j School, will attend sessions of the Oregon Council ot. Mathematics j Teachers convening at Portland State College Saturday, January 23. She will visit also with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Burk halter, Portland. Speaker at the meeting will be S. A. Jennings, Professor of mathematics, Univer sity of British Columbia. Leonard Williamson will call for the Maverick Square Dance Club which will be held Saturday night, January 23, at Summers School. Women dancers are asked to take sandwiches or cake. Everyone is welcome. There will be a playroom for children. Mrs. John Banta, 916 Fast Main Street, injured in a car-truck ac cident t ebruary 17, . 1958, near Weed, is in Rogue Valley .Memor ial Hospital, 2825 Barnctt Road, .vlcdrord, where she had major surgery January 20 on her left loot and knee. She had surgery on her right log four months af ter the accident. Cards and let ters to the hospital address will be appreciated. Mrs. Hazel Drinkwater will be hostess to members of the Happy Hour Club to be at the home of Mrs. C. C. Heidrick, 328 Wash ington, on Tuesday, January 26. A 1:30 p.m. dessert luncheon will be followed by a social afternoon. The January meeting of the Council of Church Women will be held Monday, January 25, at the First Christian Church, beginning at 1:30 p.m. Otis Bell, pastor of First Chris tian Church, Mrs. Bell and Arlene Skaugset, church secretary, re cently attended the Conference on Evangelism sponsored by the San Jose Bible College recently. "The Life of Christ," a film strip will be shown Saturday, Jan uary 23, at the first family night of the new year to be held in Westminster Hall of Peace Me morial Presbyterian Church. The evening will begin with a 6:30 pot luck supper. Many of the pictures were taken in the Holy Land and are in color. Take a potluck dish and the family. Wayne Keefer has returned to his home from Hillside Hospital following treatment for pneumonia. Catholic Daughters of America will hold their annual potluck supper social Monday, January 25, at 6:30 p.m. in Sacred Heart Par ish Hall. Keno PTA potluck supper and dance will be held at the Keno Grade School, 6:30 tonight. Steak Dinner at the Eagles Hall, 6 p.m. Saturday, January 23, will be served free to all past presi dents, members with birthdays in January, new members and the wives initiated in January and their proposals and wives. All other members pay $1 per plate. Accepts Position County Assessor Hap Caldwell has accepted appointment to the Legislative Committee of the Ore gon Assessors Association. The ap pointment was made by , John Koopman of Malheur County, who said Caldwell provided invaluable service on the association's tim ber committee last year. World's first dean of men was Thomas Arkle Clark, who took this post at the University of Illinois in 1901. OREGON HEART ASSOCIATION, campaign chairman Dr. H. M. Amsberry DDS, left, presented to Carrol Howe, Klamath County School superintendent, a rubber replica of a heart to be used in the I960 Heart Association effort to promote education of heart functions throughout Oregon. The heart is to be placed in the schools' audio-visual de partments on a loan basis and may be used by interested groups. Work Outlined Of CD Women The Klamath County Women's Civil Defense Committee can do much to help persons who have been inquiring about how to go about preparing the home for emergencies, county CD Director Joe Searles says. The organization, headed by Mrs. Natalia Reichenberg, is made up of CD representatives from women's organizations with in the county. It meets regularly every second and fourth Tuesday of each month for discussion of individual and family safety dur ing emergency. Committee delegations from counties throughout the state at tend semiannual conferences of Women's Civil Defense Advisory commititees in Salem to report on local activities, attend work ses- ions and gather information oil how to serve communities. Other informational material is available at the county CD office in the county courthouse, Klam ath Falls. A combination of home preparedness and widespread ac ceptance of the home fallout shel ter program are aims of every CD organization in the country, Searles says. Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Friday Max. Min. Prep. Funeral services for Mrs. C. A. Bunnell, 74, resident of Klamath Falls for many years, were held January 17 from the Phillips Fu neral Home, Goldendale, Wash ington. .Mrs. Bunnell died Janu ary 14. Interment was in Fern hill Cemetery in Menlo, Washing- California Weather I'nitrd Press International San Francisco Bay Area: A few showers today; partly cloudy to night and Saturday; high today 54-59; low tonight 44-50; southerly winds 10-22 m.p.h.; chance of rain 70 per cent today, then 20 per cent. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Occa sional snow through Saturday; lit tle change in temperature. Sierra Nevada: Occasional light snow through Salurday, probably becoming partly cloudy by Satur day afternoon; slightly colder to night. Sacramento Valley: A few showers today, then cloudy through Saturday; high both days 47-57; low tonight 33-42; southerly winds 8-15 m.p.h. Northwestern California: Scat tered showers today and north of Garberville through Saturday; partly cloudy in south tonight and Saturday; slightly cooler tonight; high today and low tonight Ukiah 55-40. Santa Rosa 58-38, Napa 58 38; small craft warnings for southerly winds today near coast, diminishing tonight. j Ion, January 18. She was born in Prairie City Oregon, and with her husband. Chester A. Bunnell, came to Klam ath Falls in 1928, living here until 1955 when they moved to Center ville, Washington. Mr. Bunnell was affiliated with the Weyer haeuser Company here. Mis. Bun nell was a member ot the East ern Star, Neighbors of Woodcraft, Klamath Falls lmmanuel Baptist Church and the Centcrville Grange. Survivors include the widower, Chester A. Bunnell, and seven children; M. F. Bunnell, Yakima: Mrs. H. W. Laikey. Greenville, California: Mrs. Willis Ausland, Grants Pass; Mrs. Ted Nichols, Alder, Washington; Mr. C. A. Bunnell Jr., Klamath Falls; Mrs. Richard Wcsterberg and Mrs. Bill Richey, Ashland; and 14 grand children. She leaves two sisters. Miss Dorothy But z and M r s. Trevor Bullard, Menlo, and one brother. Max Butz, Raymond, Washington. The Pope has had a body of Swiss Guards at the Vatican since the late 1400s. FILM Developing 8-Picture Roll Jumbo Prints 39 Western Thrift 7th & Main Astoria 47 38 .10 Baker 27 23 .05 Bend 23 15 T Brookings 59 49 .26 Burns 29 ,14 Chemult 37 30 Chiloquini 45 22 Eugene. M M M Lakeview 42 31 .05 Medford 59 42 Newport 51 36 .19 North Bend 62 47 .28 Pendleton 20 11 T Portland Airport 40 31 T Red Bluff 47 45 1.21 Redmond 17 T Roseburg M M M Salem 40 33 .01 One of the world's largest elk lino li.rai- in iha Trn1artat ama of Jackson Hole country of north ern Wyoming. DANCE & Red Barn Dorris, California , Music By PEE WEE STIDHAM and the Butte Valley Rangers 1.00 Person Dancing 9 till 1 Stay Young G 0 Dancing Eastern Oregon Parllv clnndv! through Saturday with fog in some valleys. Little temperature change. Low tonight 10-20; high! Saturday 22-32 in north and 32-42. in south. Western Oregon Occasional rain and periods of partial clear ing through Saturday. A little freezu g rain at times near the Columbia Gorge. Slightly warmer in northern interior. Low tonight 35-45 except 30 in vicinity of Co lumbia Gorge. Southerly to south easterly coastal winds 12-25 miles an hour diminishing slowlv through Saturday. Smallcraft warnings displayed. Noilhrrn Oregon Beaches Occasional rain Saturday. Tern-1 peraiure range 38-48. Variable j winds 5-15 miles an hour. ' OPEL Europe's Most Distinguished Economy Car! 35 Miles Per Gallon! Pride of Germany! Built by General Motors in their awn factory in Ger many . . . since 1929. Sold and serviced by the 3300 Buick dealers through-out the U.S. PARTS Readily available from Buick dealers every where. GUARANTEE by General Motors through Buick dealers everywhere. SERVICE factory trained mechanics ot Buick deal ers everywhere. A real and permanent home for your Opel here and throughout the U.S. A true economy car with lots of room and comfort, and trunk room galore . . . built with the excellence of German manufacture. SEDANS and STATION WAGONS In Stock for Immediate Delivery! Jim Vinde Buick Co. 1330 Main Ph. 4-3141 The Easy Way To Have Your Car We Specialize SerVICed ! uriiiMM-ki'r 1 wr SERVICE! UPTOWN - - Bring your car in while you do your chores up town. .We're only a block from Main Street and all the large stores and banks! Leave Your Car With Usl Lubrication Service Wash Polish Mufflers Brake Service Tune Up Electrical Work All Makes COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE DICK B. MILLER CO. HILLMAN CADILLAC Ph. TU 4-4154 How's Your Office? Convenient or Inconvenient? Attractive or Unattractive? r1ii 11 ... Jf Call Jones' Office Supply for A Free Office Analysis! Every business leader likes to think of his com pany a Wonderful Place to work, is receiving he wonts his employes to feel that way about it, too! It's no wonder, then, that Steelcose 1 300 line office furniture, which makes every com pany a Wonderful' Place to work, is receiving such on enthusiastic reception. The company re ceives extra benefits in the form of a better organ tied, more conscientious office staff , , , and each employee benefits from a wide variety of personalised 1300 line features. All of these benefits con be enjoyed by your firm now! Coll Jones' Office Supply for a free office survey and layout with no obligation. SAVE WORKING CAPITAL ... LEASE YOUR ENTIRE OFFICE REQUIREMENTS That's right! Now you can rent or lease everything you need in your office . . . desks, chairs, business machines. Qjdm&A ' Off ice Supply 629 Main " Phone TU 2-4408 IT'S A WQNPERFUL STOtl Saturday Check List OF GOOD VALUES m knit ilrossos only $19.99 . . . should be $25.95 and $27.95. fine chenille wool 2-pc. dresses in many colors and styles, by famous knitting mill, specially made for the ladies who wear 14'2 to 2012. polka dot jacket dresses only $22.95 . . . instead of $26.95. pure silk sheath dresses, sleeveless to wear after 6. young-, short cropped jacket with long sleeves and wide portrait collar, white polka dots on navy, or white polka dots on beige, elegant! jr. cotton dresses only $12.98 . . . instead of $15.95. fine ly woven dresses with full skirts, soft boxed pleats, precision tucked bodice, smart cummerbund inset to enhance the small waist, semi-scooped neck, short sleeves, in new blue. nylon slopvnr only $2.99 . . . regularly $3.98, $4.98 or more, january special purchase of ny lon tricot baby doll pj's, popover pj'3 and waltz length gowns, embroidered sheer nylon over nylon tricot, square neckline with small cap sleeves, many other styles, heavenly pastels. magic crepe dresses only $12.98 . . . instead of $15.95. cus tom sizes for the shorter figure, com type print on blue background. e.asy gored skirt, tucked bib effect framed with self flange, square neckline, short sleeves, very becoming. flannel pj's only $3.49 . . . january special, cotton flannel with small polka dots, famous brand, collar with nylon lace trim, long sleeve gathered into a wide band cuff, long trousers with elastic across back, several styles. duster robes only $3.29 . . . nationally $3.98. lovely multi-color plaids, soft in colors and gentle in design, full slanted patch pockets, perky braid trim at collar, short sleeves. liaby knit orlon sweaters kitten soft, truly full fashioned, short sleeve pullovers only $3.79. long sleeve cardigans only $5.79. white, pink, blue, mint, turquoise, geranium, toast, navy, black and many other new spring colors. wool car coats only $14.99 . . . should be $19.95. man ufacturer's close out. new looking shawl collar of orlon pile, matching cuff detail, huge flap top pockets, double breasted with rayon quilted lining, medium grey trimmed with black or trimmed with light grey. tnri limits only $5.79 .... early spring colors well cut with band top. back zipper, woven plaids of crisp cotton, blues, greens and golds. coat sale now only $25.00 and $38.00 . . . were up to twice as much, this is our clean sweep fashion clearance, newest styles, famous names and fabrics, all sizes. OLDSMOBILE 7th & Klamath