BASIN BRIEFS .
DAIRY
MR. AND MRS. BILLY NEL
SON and Deniece recently moei
to Dairy from MJigell Valley.
O
DON JACOBS, Frank Tultdahl.
C. B. Short and Hugh Davis spent
the weekend near Paisley sage
hen hunting.
MR. AND MRS. MARVIN Ml.
CHAEL spent the weekend at
Lakeview.
MRS. HARVEY BULTS and
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Brown, and daughter
of Klamath Falls attended a fam
ily reunion at Diamond Lake Sun
day.
BENNETT FARNIIAM of
Barnes Valley is baling h a y in
, Dairy and Hildebrand.
MR. AND MRS. ED TATE and
family recently moved to the Chal
lis Ranch in Hildebrand.
. MR. AND MRS. M. R. BIGGS
and Susan of Madras spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Del-
bert Jacobson. Richard Trapp of
Portland was also a visitor at the
Jacobson home.
MR. AND MRS. HARRY JANS
SEN recently moved to Klamath
Falls.
MR. AND MRS. TED HECK of
Seattle recently spent several
days with Mrs. Don Rice and family-
SUZANNE RICE, Linda Ober
haide, Pat Nelson and Wilma Al
berts spent the weekend at Lake-
view.
BILL BULTS of Roseburg was
home for the weekend.
MR. AND MRS. JOHN THOMP
SON and family recently moved
to Tillamook.
MR. AND MRS. WAYNE DYE
of Klamath Falls recently visited
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. King
Hubble, and her sister, Mrs.
George Hard in Bly.
DON RICE recently took his fa
ther to his home in Portland.
Four New Teachers At Chiloquin
o
HERALD AND NEWS, Kfemalh Falls, Ore. Wednesday, September 13, 1961
O
PAGE J-B
CHILOQUIN
MR.' AND MRS. JOHN MAN-!
NERING took in both the staic
fair and a trip to the coast din
ing the Labor Day holiday. They
have had their daughter and son-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Leg-
get, as guests from Garden Grove,
Calif. -
,:1 . . ,
SHERRY LYNN KERWOOD
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. R. I.
Kerwood, flew from San Francisco1
to Houston early in August to vis
it with relatives. She returned a
few days ago on the train
companied by her grandmother.
Sherry is a fourth grader this fall
REV. AND MRS. ALBERT
PLACE returned last weekend
from a week spent in Seattle and
Portland. Mr. Place had taken
refresher course in a Puget Sound
College. He is the minister of the
Fort Klamath and Chiloquin Meth
odist churches. .
MR. AND MRS. ROSS McIN
TYRE and their four children
spent the Labor Day holiday on a
trip to Greenlcaf, Idaho, where
they left their oldest daughter,
Joyce, who will be a freshman
at Greenleaf Academy.
MR. AND MRS. RON HARRI
SON have been hosts this past
week to Mrs. Harrison's mother.
Mrs. Henry Gerken, from South
Dakota, and her brother and sis
ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Gerken, and their son, Gary, from
Connecticut.
FRIEDA KIRK, Portland, visit
ed her parents, Mr. and Mr.
Freidman Kirk, last week. Earlier
this summer she had attended the
American Indian Convention in
Chicago and gone on to Washing
ton, D.C., where she visited for
some time with an aunt and uncle.
JIM HERRON, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Herron, underwent cor
rective surgery on his shoulder
in Klamath Falls Wednesday. He
had been hurt at the roundup in
Lakeview Monday while doing
bareback riding.
LELIA KIRK and her son. Ray
mond, visited in Ashland Labor
Day weekend with Edna Dill-
Strom. While there they attended
a Shakespearean play.
MR. AND MRS. PAUL HER
RON were hosts during the past
week to her sister-in-law, Mr.
Phillip DeLano. and her four chil
dren of Belmont. Calif. Trips
to Crater Lake and to the Lake
view Roundup were enjoyed by
the guests.
LAWRENCE (FAT) CHILES.
Sacramento was a weekend guest
of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Ohles.
Ohlcs had flown up Friday. He is
a former local resident.
MR. AND MRS. W. H. Mac
DONALD spent the Labor Day
holiday at Trinidad, Calif., on the
coast.
FORT KLAMATH
MRS. LOREN L. MILLER JR.
and family have moved back !o
Red Bluff after spending the sea
son here. Miller will be here un
til late fall to supervise the ship
ping of the Loren Miller Compa
ny stock with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Loren L. Miller Sr.
FRED McQUISTON of North
Hollywood was a weekend guest
at the home of Guss A. Page and
his son and family, the Gene
Pages.
MRS. PATRICK J. McAULIFFE
and children have moved to Cot
tonwood in time for fall school
enrollment. McAuliffe has re
turned to superintend the McAul
iffe Ranches Inc. . cattle opera
tions after moving his family
south.
MR. AND MRS. E. L. RIDGE-
WAY, former residents, now of
Fullerton, Calif., are staying in
their trailer home at the Fort
Creek Resort and will leave later
to attend the Pendleton Roundup
MRS. WARREN WELLS and
family have gone to their home
on the Gill Cattle Company ranch
at Exeter after spending the sum
mer here. Wells will join them in
late fall when the Gill cattle have
been shipped south after pasturing
here on one of the R. S. Dixon
ranches.
SAM MILLER left last week for
New York City after a month's
vacation here with his parents,
brother and family, the Loren L.
Millers Sr. and Jr. He is affiliat
ed in New York with an art gallery.
MRS. A. F. McQUISTON has
returned to Long Beach after
spending the summer here. Her
husband is reported to be hospi
talized there again as the after
math of a car wreck this spring
for which he has been hospitalized
several times.
JIM KNIGHT AND WALTER
WISE of the local Hawkins Cat
tle Company ranch returned Fri
day from a trip to the company
ranch at Hollister. They transport
ed south by truck a load of calves,
some of which were 4-H animals
to be groomed for later showing
at the San Francisco Cow Palace,
and the remainder put on pasture
at the ranch.
CHIIXKJUIN-Frank Hale. prin-
cipal of Chiloquin Grade School,
reports that there are four ne.v
teachers on his faculty of 12 for
the lower six grades and that
there are several changes in the
lineup of helpers for cafeteria and
of bus drivers.
Returning teachers are Mrs.
Mary Whiting and Mrs. Dorothia
Kuist, first grade: Dorothy Gulli
fAd and Mrs. Athel Roser, third
grade; Mrs. Rosalie Hoback, four
grade: Ross Mclntyre, fifth grade;
and Mrs. Agnes Pfeiffer, sixth
grade. Two of the new instructors
have substituted in the school dur
ing past years. They are Mrs
Two-Year Sentence Meted
On Gun Carrying Charge
Alfred L. Lugo. 26-year - old
Klamath Falls man, was sched
uled for a return trip this weeK
to the Oregon State Penitentiary
in Salem.
Lugo was sentenced to a two
year prison term last Friday by
Deer Cause
Car Wreck
An Oakland, Calif., man was un
hurt but his car was damaged to
the point where it had to be towed
away when he swerved into a bor
row pit alongside Highway 97 in
an effort to avoid striking three
deer early Tuesday morning.
Sclby M. Pooker, 50, was head
ed north on Highway 97, state po
lice reported. When he was forced
to avoid striking the animals, his
late-model car was wrecked in a
roadside ditch and had to be re
moved by a wrecker. Pooker es
caped injury, police said.
Minor damage resulted wheu a
truck operated by Milton J. Hilkev,
32, Central Point, struck the right
side of a vehicle dperated by Har
old A. Graves, 708 Jefferson Street.
State police said Graves had cut
across a service station at the cor
ner of South Sixth Street and Gel-
tie Street and was waiting for traf
fic to clear on South Sixth before
turning onto the street. Hilkev.
who had been refueling, backed
away from the gas pump, striking
the Graves vehicle.
Circuit Judge Donald A. W. Pipen
alter he waived grand jury and
pleaded guilty to being an ex-convict
in possession of a gun, a
felony.
City police arrested Lugo twice1
in August, on the 9th and again
on the 16th. for carrying a wea
pon. The charge was placed on
the grand jury agenda after a dis-l
tnct court preliminary hearing.
Prior to sentencing, Arthur Bed-
doe, Lugo's attorney, said the
young man was carrying a gun for
protection because his life had
been threatened. Lugo told Judge
Piper he didn't know the name of
the man who had made the threat.
Beddoe added that Lugo is mar
ried and the father of three small
children.
Lugo served a previous peniten
tiary term for assault with a dan
gerous weapon and, at the time of
the gun charge, was on two-years'
probation for petit larceny, a count
reduced from burglary.
Dona Ash, who is teaching sec
ond grade, ano Bill Wiest, fifth
grade.
Newcomers to the system are
second grade instructor Mrs. Hel
en Rogers qgd fourth grade fcach
er Mrs. Lucy Poole. Mrs. Rogers
moved here from Colorado and
Mrs. Poole from North Dakoti,
although she had attended the Uni
versity of Oregon and lived in this
state the majority of the time in
the last 12 years.
Mrs. Earl Greear is again the
head cook in the cafeteria and her
assistants are Mrs. Bill Martin,
Fort Klamath. Mrs. Fred Laiscn.
and Mrs. Delphine Parazoo.
Bus drivers are Mrs. Bill Mar
tin, the Fort Klamath route; Frank
Sutton. Modoc Point route; the
Rev. James Byrd, Agency Lake
shore route, and J. R. O'Cal
lahan Jr., Sprague River route. In
addition parents are taking turns
bringing seven students from
Government Headquarters at Cra
ter Lake each day.
Janitors are Bill McNamcr,
grade school: Frang Sutton, junior
high, and H. L. Stewart, high
school.
LAKEVIEW
MERRY MIXERS will host an
Interstate Highlanders Square
Dance and meeting Saturday,
Sept. 16, at the hall in Pelican
City. Meeting will begin at 7 p.m.
and dancing at 8 p.m. Women are
asked to bring salads or des
serts for potluck. All square danc
ers welcome.
FORT ROCK
MR. AND MRS, GRANT HILL
and xgranddauehter, Lynne Hill,
of Portland visited with his broth
er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Nick Klerk, for several days re
cently. MRS. E. N. PETTERSON and
children of Portland were Labor
Day weekend visitors of her uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Charles C.
Miles.
MR. AND MRS. ED CATER
and children have moved here
from Salem. He is employed at
the new retirement development.
Jeff, Ralph and Mike are all en
rolled in Fort Rock School.
MR. AND MRS. RALPH MC
ALLISTER had as their weekend
guests her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Gran Boatwright and an un
cle, George McKowen, all of Sa
lem and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mc
Kowen and family of Medford.
SUMMER LAKE
MR. AND MRS. NEWMAN
KIMES and sons spent the Labor!
Day weekend with her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Foster.
RECENT VISITORS of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Withers were two sis
ters, Jean and Joan Boilcau of
San Francisco.
MR. AND MRS. MILES MUL-
KEY of Eureka visited her sister,
Mrs. Bill Harvey.
MRS. JAMES FOSTER and
daughter, Elaine, stayed overnight
with her sister-in-law, Mrs. New
man Kimes, and family, Aug. 30.
in Klamath Falls while attend
ing the joint Lake-Klamath Coun
ty Teachers' Inservice.
MRS. LORRAINE HOWARD and
three sons have returned to Eu
gene after spending the summer
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
S. D. Harris.
JERRY WEAVER was here
from Las Vegas for a week to
visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Weaver.
MRS. JAMES FOSTER and
daughters, Janice and Elizabeth
attended the wedding of Joan
PoAielu and Paul Spoelstra at
Powell Butte Sept. 2.
Congress Gets
Damage Bill
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Navy
nas presented Congress with a
$41.6-million bill for the fire dam.
age suffered by the aircraft car
rier Constellation in the Brooklyn
Navy Yard last December.
The repair work has almost I
been completed and the huee car
rier will be finished by Christmas,
the Navy predicted.
Fifty lives were lost m the blaze
which broke out when a tank of
jet fuel was spilled on the hanger
deck and ignited by a welding
torch.
The extent of the damage was
disclosed in testimony released
Monday by the House Appropri
ations Committee. The money is
a supplemental appropriations
bill.
Merrill VFW
Holds Coffee
MERRILL Merrill VFW Auxil
iary held a coffee hour at the
home of Velma O'Neil Wednesday,
Aug. 23, to honor Margaret Moore
and Mary Lou Swisher, members
who are leaving the community
A handkerchief shower was giv
en with the gifts being placed on
gift table decorated with a bou
quet of garden flowers. Refresh
ments were served from a lace
covered table to the 31 members
present.
A swimming party was given
tor boys and girls who sold pop
pies. Cancer bandages were rolled
at the last social meeting.
Vote Scheduled
CANBERRA, Australia (API-
Prime Minister Robert G. Men-
zies announced to the House of
Representatives today that gener
al elections will be held Dec. 9.
Peoplt Read
SPOT ADS
you or
Aboard Ship
NORFOLK, Va. Serving with
the USS Forrestal, operating from
this eastern seaport is Larry Kre-
itzberg, machinist s mate third,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
W. KreiUberg of Route 3, Klamath
Falls.
The Forrestal recently complet
ed a seven-month cruise in the
Mediterranean.
Thieves Hit
Two Autos
Sneak thieves too cheap to buy
their own hubcaps attacked two
cars in Klamath Falls recently.
Hubcap thefts were reported to
city police by Richard J. Steyskal
Malm, and Alden Marrs of the
Al-N-Dale Used Car Lot at Sev
enth and Plums treets. Steyskal
said two new caps were stolen
from his car Sunday night while
it was parked adjacent to the Tow
er Theater.
Marrs said thieves stole two
"flipper" hubcaps off a car
his lot.
The City Recreation Department
reported that someone smashed a
32x32-inch window on the Spring
Street side of the Klamath Audi
torium.
Oscar Schupp, 2210 Vine Street,
found a woman's black handbag
on East Main Street near Mills
School.
A prowler was reported in the
2600 block of Turnage Street.
FALSE TEETH
That Loosen
Need Not Embarrass
Many wearers of false teeth have
suffered real embarrassment because
their Dlate droDned. BlioDed or wob
bled at lust the wronn time. Da not
live In fear of this happening to you.
Just anrlnkle a little PASTEETH.
the alkaline (non-acid) powder, on
your plates. Moid laise teetn more
firmly, so they feel more comfort
able.. Does not sour. Checks "plate
odor breath". Get PASTEETH at
drug counters everywhere.
MERRILL
GET ACQUAINTED WITH
YOUR TEACHER RECEPTION
will be held Thursday, Sept. 14,
at 8 p.m. at the grade school
gym. All parents of both high
school and grade school students
are invited. Baby sitters will be
provided for younger children.
BLY
MERRY MIXERS will host an
Interstate Highlanders Square
Dance and meeting Saturday,
Sept. 16, at the hall in Pelican
City. Meeting will begin at 7 p.m.
and dancing at 8 p.m. Women are
asked to bring salads or desserts
for potluck. All square dancers
welcome.
Hurry! Ends Thursday!
Miller Days
.All
Our Annual September Sales Event
with Terrific Savirtgs in Every De
partment. Free Customer Parking - 5th and Klamath
OR YOUR MONEY BACK
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GUARANTEE
10-Dy Money Bflck Guaran
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Return it anytime within 10
day ( parehase.
it Ask to ee Zenith'i One-Year
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Fctory Repair Service avail
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STANDARD OPTICAL
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Ph. TU 4-8322
Check All
3
PAGES
3800 So. 6th
&3
Reg. 1.00
CRAYOLAS
School Special!
SAT. ONLY
54" and 58" Width
Skirt Lengths
98
Xlk Siiei
ft
Boys' Sizes 6-18 11-oz.
DENIM JEANS
Vat Dyed ) 98
Reinforced MM
Denim JSl
Men's 100
Combed Cotton
10-13
ARGYLESgg
Boys' All Cotton Striped .
Crew Sox p 39c
Wood & Wool
Blends
I Each
Ladies1 Slips
Lace Trimmed Acetate "
in Pink or White "
1.19
Half Slips
97c
100 Acetate
Lace Trimmed
Fleece Gold 4-oz. 4-ply
100 Virgin Wool
Knitting Yarn
77c ;
Skein
C Boys' Short Sleeve
X ORLON figT
- r uiuhci Jim la
... aa
Hfcr it . . . m
New Fall Jewelry ftflc baii Jjobes c
Necklaces and earrings in new WW 'VtS-- 088 tsS
fall tones. Value J eftSLjl
Reg. 1.45
Hunting Caps 1.29
Reg. 12.95
Hunting Vest 8.88
, Heavy Duck
Hunting Pants
88
Reg. 8.75
Value
Reg. 9.35 Duck
Hunting Coats
Reg. 17.95
Hunting Jacket
14"
COLEMAN
CAMP STOVES
Big 29.95
3-BURNER
2395
All Plastic nn.
Yellow Hunting Hats 88c
349
Large 2 Buretr
Reg ll.S
17.8
SinflfrtoiCT"-"" TIP
See Us For Geaqjae Coleama la
placement Parts!
Case "of 135
Clay Pigeons
GUN TOTE V,5
For Car, Pickup or Home
Holds Rifles and Shotguns
48
total Sfettyift Ctauing Kit
. leg. 1.21 69
Reg. 35c Outer's
GUH OIL
Pressure Can .
33
INVENTORY
SALE IN
PROGRESS!
Many Good
Values Left
and 1 Thrifty Variety