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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1961)
dominunilij j; (Calendar I fulelakerapgers Join In Birthday Celebration THURSDAY KLAMATH COUNTY FARM Bu reau, annual meeting 6:30 p.m.. no - host smorgasbord Bonanza School Cafeteria. Installation of county and center officers. SHASTA SCHOOL PTA, p.m., Shasta School. 7:30 VFW AUXILIARY SOCIAL meeting, 8 p.m., VFW Hall. Can cer bandages to be wrapped. KLAMATH ARCHERS POT- LUCK, 6:30 p.m. KOTI-TV Build ing. Business plans for winter ac tivities. FRIDAY MERRY MIXERS SQUARE Dance and Workshop. 8 p.m.. Pel ican City Hall. Bill Mayhew, call er. Women bring sandwiches. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE, No. 1106, fish fry, 6 to 8 p.m. Members, families and guests. PAST ORACLES CLUB, 8 p.m., 632 Roseway Drive. RAMBLING SQUARES BEGIN NING square dance class, 8 p.m. 4f)63 Frieda Street; ST. PIUS X ALTAR SOCIETY rummage sale, Clyde's Towing Service, 734 Klamath Avenue. Fri day 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. EAGLES AUXILIARY regular meeting, 8 p.m., Eagles Hall. SCHOOL MATES CLUB, 2 p.m., June Grimes, 1434 Canby. ALOHA CHAPTER, OES, rum mage sale, 9 a.m.. Masonic Tem ple, 418 Klamath Avenue. SATURDAY ST. PIUS X ALTAR SOCIETY rummage sale, Clyde's Towing Service, 734 Klamath Avenue. Fri day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. KLAMATH COUNTY INTER MEDIATE Grade Teachers, 9:30 a.m., Peterson School. Peterson and Gilchrist schools, hostesses. WORLD WAR I and Barracks Auxiliary rummage sale and ba zaar, Piggley Wiggly Building. PUBLIC CARD PARTY spon sored by Sons of Norway Lodge, Saturday, Sept. 23, 8 p.m. Shas ta Community Hall, corner Shas ta Way and Madison. All welcome. WOMEN OF THE MOOSE, birthday dinner, 7 p.m.. Moose Hall, 1010 Pine Street. Members with birthdays in August-Septem ber honored. OES RUMMAGE SALE, Aloha Chapter, 9 a.m. Masonic Temple, 418 Klamath Avenue. POE VALLEY GRANGE, 7:30 p.m., potluck dinner. COW BELLES ANNUAL BEEF Dinner, 5 to 8 p.m., Altamonti Junior High Cafeteria. Public in vited. Bev Lyon, PP&L home economist, will prepare dinner. Special prize awards at 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. SUNDAY KLAMATH HISTORICAL SOCI ETY trek to Pothole Springs. Meet 8 a.m. in front of court house, Take sack lunch. Public welcome. Mr. and Mrs. Devere Helfrich. trip leaders. Tl'LELAKE Tulelake Grangers will join other granges of the state in birthday greetings to Na tional Grange Secretary Harry Ca tron who will celebrate his 80tn birthday anniversary on Oct. 3i. He has served as national secre tary for 59 years. The grange will elect office's Oct. 12 to permit the new slate to attend the slate convention in Sacramento. Oct. 17-20. Delegates will be the master, to be elected, and alternate delegate-elect, W. H Weitkamp. The members heard reports i! the success of the grange booths, the home economics booth whic.i Technical Education Study Set Technical Institute. American Society for Engineering Education, will conduct an "in deDth" stu.lv ior me Desi represented graneo( technical education in the Unit t)k first place and the agrftultur-; al booth which took fourth at the 1961 fair. J. B. Quinn, state grange mas ter, will be entertained at a mee'- ing here Sept. 28. the meeting to start at 8 p.m. (DST. Tulelake grangers who attended Pomona at Callahan, earned M traveling the farthest. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Scot'. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Street. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Weitkamp, Mrs. Lillian Turnbaugh, Mrs. May Moore, Mrs. Elvira Powell. Street was reelected Pomona steward and Scott was reelectej assistant steward. BASIN BRIEFS FORT ROCK MRS, MABEL MOREHOUSE had as houseguesU for several days her sister, Mrs. Jack Mo- sier, and Mrs. Dora Stonebreaker of John Day. MRS. BUD PARKS is Fort Rock United Fund Drive chairman and will be assisted by Mrs. Mabel Morehouse, Mrs. Owen Pitcher1 and Edwin Eskelin. MR. AND MRS. RALPH MC ALLISTER had as weekend guests from Salem Mr. and Mrs. George Guerne, Mr. and Mrs. John Ri ley and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Zis-tel. SILVER LAKE MRS. NEVA WARNER, post master, Is visiting her eon and family, the Martin Warners, at Oswego. Mrs. Henry Markus is acting postmaster. BEATTY LAST WEEK Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kirk returned from a trip to Claremore, Okla.. where they en rolled their son, Erin, in military school. MRS. LLELLA ANDERSON en tered several of her grandchil dren, including Fernando Herrera, in Merry Mount Military Acade my at Tacoma. RECENT RAIN, while beneficial for timbered areas, caught looal farmers unprepared since much of the grain remains to be har vested. BEAVER STATE Telephone Co. of Lakeview installed a new pay station at Beatty. JESSE L. KIRK left for Port land last week to enter Veterans Hospital for eye surgery. Reports say he is doing well. BONANZA' MRS. WILFRED NOBLE has returned from visiting her daugh ters at Inglewood, Calif. She has a first grandchild, Christo pher Owen, born to her daugh ter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs Owen Hayhyrst. , to make their home after living at Bend for several months. MR. AND MRS. JACK WU and son are back in Bonanza after two weeks in Los Angeles with rela tives and friends. MR. AND MRS. LLOYD GIFT have returned to Langell Valley after a week with friends at liki- ah, Nevada and in Los Angeles. RICHARD BURNETT of Red ding spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bur nett. MR. AND MRS. ELI ROSAN- DICH and daughters returned home from the Pendleton Round up. t MRS. FRED ROSE and daugh ter, Joan, of Castle Rock spent several days with tier sister, Mrs Jack Metier. HENRY DEARBORN left Sept. 17 lor Portland to take his physi cal for the Army. MALIN MR. AND MRS. GEORGE GRAVES of The Dalles were re cent guests of Mrs. Graves' par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kirk- Patrick. MR. AND MRS. A. E. STREET recently spent several weeks vaca tioning at Gold Beach. ROSE ZLABEK of Eugene wis a recent guest of Air. and Mrs. Ben Pickett. FARRELL WILSON who is sta tioned on the U.S. Cabildo in San Francisco is spending a 30 day leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilson. ' MR. AND MRS. NELS SOU- DERLAND and daughter, Margie, of Santa Cruz recently visited Souderland's aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ratliff. ELDON JOHNS has returned to Corvallis where he will enter Or; gon State University. ed States. Funds for the study. some $47,000. have been approp.i ated from the National Science Foundation. Serving on the national commit tee is R. W. Bingham, dean of education services at Oregcn Technical Institute, Klamath Falls. Bingham directed the first Na tional Science Foundation . spon sored summer institute (or tech nical instructors at the Univer sity of Houston campus. The ASEE, in explaining the need for such a study, said, "Re cent studies reveal an acute shot'' age of technological manpower in the U.S. This has a direct bear ing on the future needs of soci ety in general and on national security in particular." o X v . ' IHERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore o Thunday, Se ptember 21. WM PAGE II A U.S. Moves To Halt Oil Combine SAN KRANClSClt il'PI, Thelall its assets west of the Rocky lAmerican. Alaskan assets wouli U.S. attorney general's office Mountains over the Tidewater aid be evenly divided between the two moved Tuesday to halt proposed n east of the Rockies over to Pan I purchasers. acquisition ot me assets oi Hono lulu Oil Corp. by Tidewater Oil Newspaper SPOT ADS ore inexpensive ALASKAN NOW Rox anne Wilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilson of Malin, is now teaching at Willow Crest Elemen tary School, Anchorage, Alaska. She is a graduate of Malin High School and Oregon State University. Censorship Thrown Out SALEM (API The conviction of Nancy Welch, on grounds that hf! Guild Theater in Portland violated the city's censorship ordinance, was thrown out by the Oregon Su preme Court today. The court didn't pass on the merits of the ordinance. It did imply that it might be unconstitu tional on grounds of granting too much power to the chief of police The court, in a decision by Justice A. T. Goodwin, reversed the conviction because the com plaint against her did not state a crime. Reversing the Multnomah Cir cuit Court of Judge Paul R. Har ris, the decision said that the complaint didn't say how the film involved ("The Lovers") fell short of any standard set by the city, nor why the censor ordered cer tain scenes deleted. "The ordinance," the decision said, "purports to give to the chief of police some power to prevent the public display of obscenity, but the complaint did not charge that the picture or any part there of was obscene." The court added that if the po lice chief has power to order any picture changed to satisfy a cen sor, such interpretation would make the ordinance unconstitutional. River Waste Plan Needed MRS. JOHN McFALL is spend ing several weeks in Portland with relatives. . MR. AND MRS. MIKE CONLEY of Ashland spent the weekend in Langell Valley with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Crawford. ORVAL DeVAUL is recovcrfng from pneumonia. DEANNA BROWN and Elaine Beck are working in Los Angeles. LARRY HASKINS is attending Shasta Junior College at Redding. MR. AND MRS. GEORGE SIM MON'S have returned to Bonanza MISSOULA, Mont. AP-Pacif- ic Northwest and Canadian pollu tion control administrators want a comprehensive control plan for the entire Columoia River Basin The Pacific Northwest Pollution Control Council met here Tucsdav in advance of Wednesday's open ing of a three-day meeting of the federal Water Pollution Control Advisory Board. The federal group will go to the Clark Fo- River and Anaconda and Butte during its sessions. A report the Northwest body planned to submit to the Presi dent's advisory group says . in part: "We certainly believe that wa ters that have not been adversely affected by industrial, agricultur al or domestic developme.it should be preserved in the best condition . . . "Waters which are now of a quality below that which is ad visable should be restored." The Northwest Council includes administrators from Washington and Oregon. Co. and Pan American Petroleum Corp. The 7.800 stockholders of Hono lulu were scheduled to meet Fri day in San Francisco to vote on a proposal to sell its assets for about $362 million. But the Justice Department asserted in a suit filed in U.S. District Court here that the acquisition would violate both the Sherman and Claytoi Anti-Trust Acts by depressing competition. Honolulu Oil President L. A. Cranson said the defendants' coun sel advised that the government's action is without merit. He said Honolulu and the other companies intended to contest the suit. However, he said Friday's meet ing had been postponed because of the suit. No new date has ben set. The action was filed by Lyle T. Jones, anti-trust chief in San Francisco, to prevent the proposed sale which was approved by the various companies in an agree ment signed last May 15. Honolulu, a producer of crude oil and natural gas, plans to turn Alexander Hamilton, first U.S secretary of the treasury, is said to be the "father of the U.S. financial system." DR. NOLES OPTOMETRISTS URGE YOU TO SEND THE WHOLE CHILD TO SCHOOL 9 NOW IS the ideal time ta have your child's eyes examined. Dr. Noles Optometrists have served the families of the Northwest for over 56 years. No appointment necessary. I ID. t.i . ""01 -'"on Convenient Credit We Give SLfC Green Stamps COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 1 730 Main TU 4-7121 Drs. Omar J. Noles and Robert Peters Horned lizards squirt blood from J the eye when excitement or alarm causes the sinus at the corner of the eye to rupture. Cow Billet Beef Stew Dinner ALTAMONT JR. HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM September 23, 1961 SALLY GIEST and son, Harold, of Eugene spent the recent week end visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Smalley. MRS. GEORGE BROTHANEK and her sister, Ann Nelston, spent last weekend visiting in Crescent City. MR. AND MRS. CLAIRE LA MEAU of Portland were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mcrvyn Wilde. PARKING SPACE Paved Lor 5th & Klamath Ave. RENT BY MONTH OR YEAR City of Klamath Falls Phone 4-3161 TWO-IN-ONE AUCTION Friday 7:00 p.m. 3899 So. 6th No salt nut weak SepUmbtr 29th becouM of hunting Ma son so wt'ro running o doublo tal thii weik it't piled to tho roftori so com tarty and stay la to our lunch stand is prepared. 4 refrigerators, 4 electric ranges, 7 bedroom sets, 5 dining sets, 4 dinettes with 4 and 6 chairs, china cabinets, several washer-dryer sets, several washers and dryers by themselves, piles of springs and mattresses, divans, sectionols, hide-a-beds, swivel and swing rockers, cheits and dressers, bunk beds, cribs, chairs, antique desk, deepfreeze, file cabinets, books and bookcases, rugs, linoleums, piano, rolloways, sleeping bags, lamps and loads of miscellaneous. GUNS GUNS GUNS 20 Cunt ot all mokei and models (ram 22s ta shotguns. Many foreign Army rifles for the collectors, mony good deer rifles, one Garond in excellent sporter condition. PREVIEW ALL DAY FRIDAY Always the largest Stock in Southern Oregon If you're nor buying or THE RESALE HOUSE You're paying too much! John C. Argetsinger, Owner niw ton 'a... t-iS Crtl.il Cav.rtibl fo!ifto foii-0odaW bvcfcf Mali, d. lux. Iv.n'no whf, iM4i4 lntfrvnnf po.f, p.wr top-plut vfrre higlt-tomprtmiM CuUau lle.rj... .IvmJnvm V I .ngiM. crt-osr For '62 . . . every F-85 has that "something eitrt" that puts It in a class by itself . ' . In Iht low-price field! Fine styling and appointmentsl Zippy alumi num V-8 anginas with up to 183 high-compmjfl on horsepowtrl Smooth 4-S Hydra-Mafic the fr- formence transmission! New roomings In sedans and a softer-than-ever ridel A lull line of models, too sedans, coupes, station wagons and sparkling new convertibles! There's an F-85 that's sited priced right for youl 'oww m it . . SEE THFy2 OlDSMOBILES . right , , , powered right . THCRC-S SMOOTH POWIKFUL V4 ACTION IN tVeTWr OtDSI tynety EifM Super 88 Dynamic 88 t f 85 t Starfire NOW ON DISPLAY. ..AT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLD8MOBILE QUALITY OEALEKSI 4 DICK B. MILLER COMPANY, 710 KLAMATH AVENUE MOL MAM Mi aft er two complete sellouts1. -J y noiDrook Hints - ,f - w m W Short Sleeved I I , ... 1' Vfti IV A Long Sleeved 6.95 V VI n Our most popular school shirts ore back in stock. All JV ff' ' vvjtA wash and wear in authentic ivy styles . . . stay-in tails. SsXJf "V ! Also back on the shelves are Oxford and Arrow shirts ( ITl! Il ff Jj in new authentic ivy patterns. Short, Va or long sleeves J fty tS'' in pop-over and button-front models tapered with the VT e fVt '-'2a long tail. You'll want a drawer full. $4.00 to $5.95. f-fl'' ' "f yfyr" n2Sr A .air - 111 w'fr'i V "v, v I A Air : T cuff less bottoms and con- t&'SB " V 'Iwr ' "at- -m cealed inner ' waist adjust- J Q3 'A f ET j ' LOOK AT THIS! , ' to I if ARROW I?! I 1fl OF FINEST 100 DURA " II t. .1 fI 'J I . I launch Kin.lcnki toiki nov 1 s ikk k k n t i s-ij-m I cuiiuiN - 1 A-l Continentals ltI i M V!ZatlZ ! ' ttfitS-SI H "t3 ot this low price. Fine Dura- In Twill MHrl 1-1 Stl 3 l1f Neat fobric Is permanently m I Will anu ISllil ifUti self-Ironing, faster drying,' v.S fc-fll .8 i!f "Sanforlzed-Plus" for lasting U Random Cord .&!9 i 4nH fit. Spe:ial collar and cuffs : I Rongom uora WTZfit. s vi 40 lonr wear-Showri I ZSir.i, , ,:fT'T above in the Chase, a soft, A SKWCh &ZZ0!ii':'' 'if ' hort-point collar style. ' f SCHOOL CASUAL Mi- .-miv 14.95 ' i jTmi- wis Aarf,'' - Our own brand ond our best seller. This - I 1 ifff SJS , new charcoal-green-black takes a shine ' ' il55 ,ha,'s out of this vbr,d- , 733 Main Downtown and Town & Country Shopping Canter 'l J . TUNE IN EVERY TUESD AYI DON'T MISS "THE CARRY MOORE SHOW a CBS-TV 9