Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1963)
LEGAL Pot LlevnMa Mifratary QtatUll Pi! 4 tmt? Trunnr PaU HMrcUry af IUU Ml MM Wi hand Jwm Jf, 1) rr Uar Uran ata CHtrtf Caurt Trial Ml Mne ri.ll Paaa rfutaM JWrrtet Nllaaja Paaa 'la Cawnty Trairirar Fa14 Stat Trtinrr Paid City af Ilaatn r.ll fin-alt fnrt nilrw Pa Faulty, law PrafeaU Mlaealianamia PiU 5Uta Traarmr fmtnlj Trirf aaanert ftfflea aiaallfaMM 4 tritratt CI r af Supraa Canrt rah an hand ColUel T-1-AJ la "--) fall w wtanea on hand Pondf, AtdfMftt ft Tnrfr On hand T-l-AJ nacalpta - TU1 eaih an h4 . CM Id Support a UImv Cell at tad )Vl) t 7-l-J Waburiad VilWKt n hand T-l-Aj Itat af Oraf on ewty Of Hunt I, ch. F PLip, Cwn.y Clra f riamth .that tha faraiolni la ecrraot appttr an Pa tad thle Uth day af louat W6J, f(Sel) LEGAL NOTICE No. 63-7J6-E SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KLAMATH EDWARD PEDERSEN, Plilnllfl, VI. DAGNEY LARSEN, JOHN DOE LAR SEN, tier husband; EESA SORENSON, JOHN DOE SORENSON. tier huibnnd; SOLRIG HANSON and JOHN DOE HAN SON, her husband, and all persons claim ing by, through or under them or any of them. Defendants. TO: DAGNEY LARSEN, JOHN DOE LARSEN. her husband; EESA SOREN SON, JOHN DOE SORENSON. her hut bind! SOLRIG HANSON and JOHN DOE HANSON, her husband, and all persont claiming by. through or under thtm, anv ol them. Defendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You, and each ol you are hereby required 1o appear and answer tha Complaint tiled against you in lne above entitled lull within tour (4) weeks of tht first publication of thfi Summons, .which dalt Is July 30, 1963, and If you fall so to answer, for want thvrtot, tha Plaintiff will apply to the Court for Decree requiring you and ach of you to set forth the nalure of any claim any of you may have In that certain real property situated in Klamath county, Oreaon, and described as: Block Six (A) FIRST ADDITION to Fort Klamath, toqether wilh tha Wh of vacated Main Street adacanl (hereto, and decreeing the Plaintiff to be the owner thereof, free and clear of any claims. Interest or demands ol you or any of you. This Summons Is served upon you, and each of you, pursuant lo an Order of ihe above entitled Court dated tha 26lh day ol July, 1963. L. ORTH SISEMORE Attorney for Plaintiff , 538 Main Slreet Klamath Falls, Oregon NO. 2S0, July 30, Aug. o. 13. 20, 1963. NO: 3 'F SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF KLAMATH ENTERPRISE IRRIGATION DISTRICT, A Corporation, Plaintiff vs. JOHN L. HAWKNS AND MARY E. HAWKINS. HUSBAND AND WIFE, ET AL Defen dants TO: THELMA F. RAGLEY, FORMER LY KNOWN AS THELMA F. REED; C. S. EDISON AND BERNICE EDISON, HIS WIFE ; WILDA ANNA LAUGHLIN ANO JOHN DOE LAUGHLIN. HER HUS BAND; ETHEL PHILLIPS AND JOHN DOE PHILLIPS. HER HUSBAND: CLARA LAUGHLIN AND JOHN DOE LAUGHLIN, HER HUSBAND; THE HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF LLOYD LAUGHLIN, DECEASED; THE HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF MARY E. HAWKINS. DECEASED; ALSO ALL OTHER PERSONS AND PARTIES UN KNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE INTEREST OR ESTATE IN AND TC THE REAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN PLAIN TIFF "5 COMPLAINT AND WHICH REFERENCE IS HEREBY MADE. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you end each of you are here by required to appear and answer the Complaint filed against you In lha above entitled court and causa on or be lore Hit OKpiration of four weeks trom the dale ol the first publication of this Sum. mons, which data of expiration Is fixed by order of Ihe above entitled court as tha 17 day of September, 1963. If you fall so to appear and answer. Plaintiff tor want thereof, wilt apply lo the ahova entitled court for ihe relief prayed for In lis Complain), to-wlt: That the above named defendants and each of I hem and all persons claiming bV. through, or under them, be barred arid -foreclosed of and from any right, tlttt, lien or estate in and to the real property described in Plaintiff's Complaint on file herein and to whcn reference Is -HjrLLAY '1 J MAR. 22 Vur Dmljf Acfmlv Guidt According to the Start, To develop messoqa for Wednesday, read worth corrrpotding to numbers ot your Zodiac btrtli sign. J l-J-JU ', 1AUIUI t-s APR 21 I MAY 21 1 Pp'l .11 TI"M,grti ? f 11'1 ?2 lrtWiv 3 I ooiot)!a 1 Autttoi.ty 35-37.40.4 4 AN' .HO- ;.. Handle 0f .1 Voth'M H Throtl 0Tnol 4 I Fntnrlt 4? Counieior 4.1 44 Mom 4SSliip 4iS Trt 47 Are 4R irx'tme 4fll isttnmfj VI ImpfOva !. QU-JJ gimini MAY 37 ft Ci-rnts 9 Hoy tONrx-r II TodVi l?Yn. II 13 hwr 1 4 And 1 b Your In Atoectl t7 Talk 10Gient TO Things ?l Y-ur 14 O J Tb In ? Com-rg 79 Mile yjUNE 2: 1226-38491 51-76-79 CANCIR t JUN,C JJ JULY 23 T-5S-33 59 '4477-8083 no JULY J4 .4 N-t V Te Ss Now V Arlgia Mour Ara 10-13-31 VMGO AUa. 24 30 Mak f-0 Implements (tJUond (ft)Adete Wul NOTICE 7O.0r I, 165.00 tiv.oo )),Wit. 9W.5 ?$. 1,190.00 70.fO 170.00 w.nn inw.n 11(1, 07. 7J ie,$9.U. n,3faU 3,a.4 Co - mfy Ora(n da haraby eerttfy aur morta tnd fraa raparti frrnlthad. Cha P, DUp, Canty Clarii DorvUy Rofar, Oiputjr l7i LEGAL NOTICE hereby mad for a mora particular de scription of said real property. This Summons Is published by Order of ie Honorable David R. Vandenberg, Judge of tha above entitled Court, made and entered on Ihe 19 day of August, 1VA3, directing publication or tnis sum mons onca each week lor four consecu tive weeks In tha Herald and News, a dally newspaper published In Klamath County, Oregon. Dale ol first publication, August 20. 1963. Data ol last publication, September 17, 1963. A. W. Schaupp Attorneys lor Plalnlill 205 Wllllls Building Klamath Falls, Oregon No. 304 Aug. 20. 27, Sept. 3, 10, 17, . 1963 Buddhists Seek Body Of Priest HUE, South Viet Nam UPI- AnL'ry Buddhist leaders Monday hrealcncd more suicides by firei I they are not Riven the body ot a 17-ycar-old novice priest wlie burned himself to death last week. The Buddhists claim the govern ment is persecuting them on re- ipous-political grounds. 'Die gov ernment denies it. President Nro Dinh Diem's se cret police seized the body last Wednesday alter slugging Bud idhists with swinging steel helmets when they were carrying it into (his city for a funeral. 'If you do not return the body right away, a meeting and sim ilar demonstrations will follow,' Buddhist leader Thich Tri Thu said in a letter he sent to the province chief. The government said it has given the charred body of the priest to his brother, and that it has been buried in a village north of here. In Saigon, 4110 miles to Iho south, thousands of Buddhist sym pathizers assenjjiled at the Big .a loi pagoda lor u sit-down, hunger strike. The Boman Catholic Church in South Viet Nam tried In disasso ciate itself from the dispute be tween the government and the country's Buddhist majority. Diem is a Human Catholic, as arc most of his cabinet members Tlie hardest substance in the human body is the enamel on leelh R. 1VU.AN- DMA 23 39.44.50-C- 69708384V-;- ICOIPIO A I Y,r fi? I mat 6 PtWonty M Receptee N our ' Hut 6fl r-wmoos ftOCreH.t 70A.vl 71 Vnaone'i 7;t w.th 74 (fl.nas 7-Sfr,.e 7s Others 77 AniKju 7fl Woy 79 An HI Or trwi!.- ( Pri bie f'j Piomittt fft IcdtW W Propo Fft Ae fit Chflngtt 90 Hum OCT. 2t 5- 9 X 54 0 WiS 81-85 V!! lAUrTAJIlUt NOV J) J OK. H i I 4-15 79 34 41 W 53 87 89 'l. CAMKOIN JAN. Ct bl?4 41-47J fc577J AOUAIlUt AN 3- e 19 7i,r p7178Ci mcit 17.70-3 Krk l74S89pl PAGE U HERALD AND I RANCHER AT WORK John Fosfer, Henley, was captured by the camera in this view as he headed for the washing stalls with his prize beef at the Klamath County Fair grounds. The annual 4-H, FFA Livestock and Sale started Saturday and concludes on Tuesday with the Rotary-sponsored barbecue and auction sale. IIP Code Cumbersome Mail U.S. MAILS (2): For a Nickel. All This By HARRY FERGUSON United Press International WASHINGTON IUPII The U. S. Post Office Department would like for you to believe that the best buy in the nation today n terms of value received is a five-cent stamp. It supports the argument by citing the fact that letter going from one state to another passes through lfi separ ate processes and the address on the envelope must be correctly read by at least eight persons. Unlss each of the eight per sons is operating at 100 per cent efficiency, there is going to be a snafu, hvery human being is fallible at some time and that is why it occasionally takes a week for a letter from New York City to be delivered across the Hudson River in Jersey City. When you drop a letter into a mail box, you set in motion this intricate urocess: A truck rushes the letter to the central post of fice. It is run through what it called a "slacker" which turns all Ihe envelopes right side up and post marks them. Then the mail is "cased by stales. Cased By Cities Then it is "cased" by cities, meaning that all the mail des tined for one city is placed in the same case. This is where trouble can occur. II a .Milwaukee leiicr No, You Can't Mail Yourself WASHINGTON (UPH - You cannot send yourself through the mails or slick stamps on some body else and ship him across country. But people keep asking about it like this letter from a teen-age girl in Rawlins. Wyo, to the Post Office Department: My boy friend and my girl friend's liny friend live in Illinois where we used to live. Our fa thers were transferred here to Wyoming. Our boy friends want to come to see us before they go away to college this fall. The cost by train, round trip, is almost $100. We have found t hat the bus about the same. If it is pos sible to mail oneself, would it he cheaper than that'.' If so, how much less.' Also, how would you go about it?" LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE i7t 1. r 1 rrfrV I I I MM FTP- IMTP gr WmmT, 5Mg 1 dlHA "8 'H31S10H '9 '3)IOWS 'S 'lSOJ 'C 'M09 'J '!N3WnNOW M UM00 'HV3d "01 '39111 '6 'AU 'L 'lOHSONiis -s 'i3nvw t 'wooaa -i 0J5v 'sssmsny NEWS, Klamath Falll, Oregon 'Silnij.,.-.fcii t niaiin rin-jt M iff l ma 'hinaij!m8?awim. May Short Cut gels in the Minnea)olis case, it may take a week to straighten things out. Mail for each city then is "tied out" put into a big bundle and then into a huge pouch. It goes to the appropriate trains or air planes and here, too, a slight er ror can cause chaos. A letter mailed from the northeast sec tion of Washington to the north west section went to San Fran cisco and back the other day. rrucks are waiting at the des tination city to carry the mail to the central post office. There takes place a "primary separa tion" letters are sorted accord ing to postal sub-stations. Then there is a "secondary separa tion," meaning the same letters arc sorted according to carrier routes. A Cumbersome Process Trucks carry the mail to the appropriate sub-station post of fices where the letters are sort ed again according to individual addresses. Then the postman picks up the letters and delivers them. This is a cumbersome process subject to human error, and the Post Office Department is seek mg short cuts. One of them is the ZIP code, which works like this you address a letter as follows: Mr. John Doc 3:ill0 North Dinwiddie Street Arlington, Va. 22207. The five numbers are the ZIP code. The 7 indicates the postal zone. The first 2 identifies the nationaj postal area, which in tins case consists of six states Tlie second 2 indicates the sub division postal area, northern Virginia. The third 2 identifies the post office, Arlington. The 07 points out the sub-station from which the mail is to be delivered to North Dinwiddie Street. With the ZIP code a postal clerk can tell at a glance pre cisoly where the letter is going It also opens up the possibility that eventually mail can be sort ed by machines capable of read ing code numbers. The ZIP code originally was designed for cor porations with heavy mailing lists, but anybody can get a number by applying to his postmaster. The Post Office Department says till per cent of the letters reacting to tlie ZIP cixie have been favorable. But an angry minoritv has lecn writing to z 3 down im HPIH Tuesday, August 20. 19G3 ;QI WWHI System testing that if this keeps up we are all going to become num bers rather than persons. Objects To Numbers "ZIP, schmip" wrote J. Paul Hunter of Williamstown, Mass., to Time magazine in an angry let ter, which he signed: "208-24-6254 iSocia Security). fl .'1-4583500 (telephone), 319 (col lege), 2 1 87 (ZIP). Time's editors replied sympa thetically, but said they were honor bound to tell Hunter that on their subscription list he was oooooj71t342014. That ended the correspondence and time marches 1. A large headache to the Post Office Department is that 80 perl cent of the day's mail is deposit ed after 5 p.m. In New York City alone seven million pieces of mail more than the daily mail vol ume o all Canada goes into the slots after 5 p.m. The Post Office Department is fighting this bottle-neck by trying to persuade big corporations to deposit their mail at intervals throughout the day. Another device for speeding de livery is called ABCD (acceler ated business collection and de livery). It works only inside the business districts of cities.. If you drop a letter in a box marked ABCD before 11 a.m., the Post Office Department will guarantee to deliver it by 3 p.m. of the same day. This was tried out last year in Lansing, Mich., worked well and is now used in more than 40 cities. World Ponders Course Red China Will Follow By Plllt. NEWSOM I'lM Foreign News Analyst Just as the nuclear test ban asrecment has aroused specula tion over possible new areas of agreement between the United Slates and the Soviet Union, so there also is room for legitimate speculation over the course now to be followed by Red China. President Kennedy phrased it in somber tones when he said at his Aug. 1 news conference that a continuation of present Ked Chi nese policies into the 1970 s could create a situation potentially more dangerous than any since the end ot World War II. The failure of the two Commu nist gianls to settle their dispute in last month's Moscow meetings eflectively isolated Peking from Moscow, and the nuclear agree ment simply added to Red Chi nese frustration. Tins is a (lustration of long -standing, having its roots in Chinese expansions and now abet ted by Soviet refusal to help Ihe Chinese develop a nuclear arsen al of their own. Will Consolidate Influence It may be expected that Red China will move strongly now to consolidate her inlluence over tlie Communist parties of Asia, and to extend it over similar parties in Africa and South America, us ing the color line as one of licr weapons. She also may he expected lo continue boring from within tac tics. She has denounced the lea dership of Ihe World Federation of Trade I'nions. the Internation al I'nion of Students and the World Federation of Democratic Youth (or supporting tile Nuclear Treaty. Rut she has made no move to withdraw membership in such Communist organizations. Militarily she is able to pose a threat in Korea, in southeast Asia and against India. Rut reckless as (lie (ted Chi nese leadership has Ix-cn with words, il has shown no real desire Horse Show Will Open Modoc Fair ALTURAS The 19fi3 Modoc County Fair at Cedarville will throw open its gates Friday morn ing for three days of county fair lun and entertainment. Friday's special entertainment will feature the annua', horse show in the afternoon in front of the grandstand. The show will open that morning with judging of the halter classes at 9 a.m. The horse show events will begin at 1 p.m with the cutting horse contest. tvents included in this year s horse show will be a local and extended stock horse class, trail horse class, children's pleasure reined horse class, champion trail horse class, cattle penning contest, and a girls barrel race. Fair manager A. H. Burmies ter reports that the entries in the horse show this year are bigger than ever and the biggest in crease in entries is in the chil dren's classes. "This certainly means that we will have lots of senior horsemen in the future if these kids continue to show such an interest in the horse show," Burmicster said. Friday evening in front of the grandstand the Modoc County Fair will present Jennie Legon and her cast of beautiful dancing girls in a program of calypso styled mu sic, songs and dances. An added feature will be a per formance by Roberto the Great, magician. Also Captain Jimmy Jamison will perform Jie first ol his sensational high dives from a 100-foot tower into a six-foot tank of water covered with flaming oil. The evening star-studded show will begin at 8 o'clock. Dean Assails Idaho Oath BOISE (UPD A University of Idaho dean testified Monday t h e Idaho loyalty oath has kept one professor from joining his depart ment and he expects more hiring problems in the future. Dr. Earl F. Cooke, dean of the university's College of Mines, was the third professor to assail the oath as an assault on academic freedom. The educators' testimony came1 as a three - judge panel openea trial of a case seeking to over turn the oath in Boise's federal court. Hearing the case are Judge Fred M. Taylor of Boise, Judgi William Mathes of Los Angeles and Judge M. Oliver Koelsch of I the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. Plaintiffs in the case who in- elude about 100 public employes and many faculty members otl the University of Idaho and Idaho State College claim the law vio lates the federal constitution. It was passed by the 1963 legisla ture. to take on a fight it is certain to lose. With the U. S. 7th Fleet patrol ling the Straits of Formosa, she has made no real move against the Chiang Kai-Shek stronghold even against the off-shore islands of Quemoys or the Mat- sus. W hen shooting broke out along the Korean truce line and three Americans died there last month, there was a flurry of speculation that this might be the start of a new Chinese-directed attempt lo start something. South Korean Klections Finally, more than to anything else, it was attributed to the sea son and to a desire to disrupt afliroaching South Korean elec tions. Tlie chance that Red China, with an obsolete air force and without nuclear weapons, would start a major action against such a lineup seems increasingly re mote. Rut. meanwhile, the nuclear re actor given to Peking by ihe Russians in 1958 continues to cook its bomb-making material and in 10 years the picture could be different. .. Fees Ruled Out On Refcrendums SAI.EM HTli - County clerk., do not have authority to levy any fees on the circulators of initia tive and referendum petitions. Atty. lien. Robert V. Thornton said today. Tlie statement uas in answer to a request made hy Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr , the slate's chief elections officer. Appling a.ked if county clerk. had authority to charge tlie spon .vx'.i of initiative or referendum movements (or tlie verification o( MCruitun-s in excess of 200 per dav. . To Place Your WANT ADffi& Phone TU 4-811 I HERALD & MEWS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATE SCHEDULE PHONE TU 4-8111 a.m. fa : p.m. week rj ays I a.m. to naon Saturoay Count five woras per line. Minimum oraer 1 lines. 3 6 10 Timet S5 00 a w 100 Lines Times Tlmt- Wentn I f 00 II M S3 $4 t0 2 IS 4 00 li 5 no eOe 7 00 14 00 u SO t Minimum Charge 1.50 50c DISCOUNT per advertisement, H nef in advance Aoova rates are tar consecutive inser tions, without change ol cwpy, 'or pri vate Individuals. Advertising mutt 04 -lear and understandaDle lo be produc tive. All words must Oe spelled out. dos offered fo. sae Oy private individuals-cash with coov. DEADLINE 4:30 p.m. day before pud Il ea I Ion. Noon Salurday for Sunday and idav. CANCELLATIONS fr CORRECT (ONS- On same schedule, except an Monday .ese are taken 'til :30 a.m. Please read first insertion of your ad. The Herald I News will give one etrt run tor typographical error. "Business Builder" WANT ADS I column Inch, S35 par month with 56 discount lor payment on or before the iflttv W ncn, Sl with Ji.so discount tor payment on or before lh. 1 0th. Based on one copy change per month. BOX SERVICE 50 cents per ad. O.RD OF THANKS, and IN McMORIAM "51 FOR COMMERCIAL RATES PHONE TU 4-8111 FUNERAL HOMES C WARD'S Klamath Funeral Home. 9?5 Hiqh Street, TU 7-U0i LOST & FOUND 2 LOST - Lower unit from 25 h.p. Evln- ude outboard molor on road near ver ier Reservoir Sunday. Finder please call TU 4-3826. LOST at Moore Park marina pair of wa ter skis and ski belt. Owner can describe. TU 7-1042 or TU 3-6785 after 6pm PERSONALS 6 KLAMATH Alcoholics Anonymous, T 4-3591, TU 4-87C4. Friendly help anytltr INSURANCE BOAT INSURANCE Hans Norland, Pine, Phone TU 2-2515. SERVICES 10 PAINTING, wallpapering at lis best. In terior, exterior, brush or spray, rev ; able price, free estimate, TU 2-313'. CUSTOM mowing, raking, and baling, F. Jarrard, telephone TU4-5352. JANITORIAL and maintenance service. Commercial and residential. TU 2-2748. CARPENTER work, cabinets, furniture repaired and relinished. Chests of draw ers made. Ph. TU 4-3749 eves. LAWNS prepared and planted. Fences of kinds installed. JacK Bowers, iu 4-3589, TU 4-7076. ROTOTILLING, tractor equipment, $7.50 per hour, C. B. Forney, TU 2-0466. HOUSE remodeling, cabinet making, fur niture finishing, TU 4-4079. F ILL dirt and topsoil delivered. Dump truck and tractor work. John Bowers, TU 4-7076, TU 4-35B9. CUSTOM baling. Can handle any ob. balers. TU 4-3084, call anytime. DUMP truck and high loader equipment with operator. Top soil, drain rock and fill dirt delivered. Bill Forney, 5444 anas la Way, TU 4-6467. CUSTOM BUTCHERING At your place, deliver to processing plant or leave at your place. Al Stoll, TU 4-6126. KENMORE, WHIRLPOOL, KELVINATOR Repair & Overhaul Specialist Washer, dryer, range, water healer FERGUSON APPLIANCE SERVICE 316 So. 6th TU 2-3185 TULELAKE SERVICE, ALSO REMODELING PAINTING Tapinq, texturing, roofing, plaster patch' TU 2-2748. SAW FILING i STEEL & CARBIDE EXPERT WORKMANSHIP SATISFACTION GUARANTEED REASONABLE RATES FRANK'S TACKLE & GRINDING SERVICE 630 E. Main TU 2-478B Gina's Tailor Shop Tailoring. alterations lor men. women, children. All work guaranteed. Reasonab e Pncis Gene'5 Men's Wear 537 Main VALLEY PUMP and EQUIPMENT CO. "BUY THE Y" JJ84 So. 6th TU 4-9776J DENTAL PLATES" New Plates Made From Your Old PERSONAL DENTURE SERVICE 1M3 Main TU 4-3?B4 HELP WANTED, FEMALE 14 WANTED baby sitter, 6 days week. Phone TU 2-67B5 atler 6 p.m. BEAUTY COUNSELOR ' COSMETICS wants counselors, lull or part-time. Es tablished company, car necessary. TU 2-5775 5 to R evenings. WOMAN lor child Care, my home days, 1 pre-schooler, l school age. References. Ph. TU 1-3658 aMer 6 pm. or weekends. HELP WANTED, MALE 16 TRUCK SALESMAN WANTED Must have good knowledge ol truck equipment and operation. Will have oo - portunity also lo sen O'dsmobiie-Cadiliac nd Used cars. DICK B. MILLER CO. . . IBM Man to service IBM typewriter divibion products. Must have. mechanical and electronic bock ground. Interviews Thursday, 22nd, 1 tt 5 p.m. ot 312 So. Seventh, wrtte for appointment. 324 Capitol N. E. Salem, Ore. Alt'n: W. C. Taaffe Wc are Equol Opportunity Em ployer. BOYS! SS0L EARN Vacation Money by sellinq the Herald & News Downtown AFTERNOONS Contact Hrald & News, Circulation Depf , 1301 Esplanade PHONE TU 4-8111 16 WANTED: Hardworking, outdoor man. travel, wecnanicai o""r, apid advancement. Box 549C. News. Hord Heodcd i Sales Manager Can yoo hire, train and supervise men?; Have you Had successful experience sell ing soeoai life contracts? Are you rea dy willino and ade to consider a con nection with a young growing company tnet otters exceptionally high over writes? Let's talk aoout It Call m collect, Jim McNelis, 602 2SI -Phoenix, Ari. DRIVER SALESMEN Required lor tha following Klamalh Falls 3 Rural 3 J574 per month Plus bonuses, commissions, rapid ad vancement, life insurance benefits, com pany profit sharing, etc. No investment or experience required. These are per manent positions. Apply 7 pm. Aug. 22 Blue Room Winema Hotel AUTOMOBILE SALESMAN Apollcalion are now belnn considered for position as automobile salesman for local Iranchised Ponliac, Rambler, British Mo tor dealer. Enjoy excellent working con ditions in modern plant, and excellent op portunity for the salesman who will work. It you are seriously considering a change, or il you are interested in selling for one ot Klamath's leading dealers, apply in person at once. See Bill Cunningham right away. ECCLES MOTOR CO. 606 So. 6th St. HELP WANTED 17 WANTED caretaker, prefer retired cou ple, small apts. In small apt. house. Write Box 568C, Herald and News. NOTICE "io7oBSEEK E RS All help wanted ads published In the Heulu & News are accepted in good; tt rh that tha iobs offered are as stated1 in Me advertising copy. We are nu re-; sponsible tor the integrity ot our adver tisers, but we make every effort fo dis cover and reject all misleading aivertn ing. Anyone answering a help van ted ad and finding it to be misleading is asked to report It to the Classified Ad vertising Department oi tha Herald V News. COUPLE needed. Married couple with out dependents for live-in supervisory do- I sitians at County Juvenile Home. Only persons with good moral character con sidered, prefer age ranqe 35-50, contact F. L. Mathews, TU 2-2501 ext. 261 for detail1; and AODOtntment. SITUATIONS WANTED 18 CHILD care in my home, weekdays, re WILL care lor working mother's chil dren in my home, reasonable rates, mother of 3, good care and food, con tact 601 Mitchell. IRONING, washing, pickup, deliver, fast service, TU 4-9434. CHILD care in my home, I or 2 pre schoolers, evening care in your home, TU 2-5420. WORKING MOTHERS child care day or nignt, I u IRONING TO DO in my home. TU 4-9936 BABY silting In my home night or day. TU 2-2081. 1627 Manzanila. JACK 8. JILL DAY NURSERY 1328 Carlson Dr. TU 2-1844 MOTEL manager or housekeeper, exoeri enced in all work. Florence Harampolis, itis sin, san -crnanao..callt. ROOMS FOR RENT 22 CLEAN, cool, quiet, sleepinq rooms. 310 So. 5lh - TU 2-0214 CLEAN housekeeping room, utilities fur nished. TU 2-1487. 317 Pine. ATT RACTIVE L Y furnished, private "bal Iv Maid service. TU 2-4074, 126 N. 3rd. BISBEEE HOTEL, 227 So. 6lh, rooms, plenty hot water, reasonable rates, new manager. TU 2-6469. ROOMS, small house, reasonable, Er nie's Hotel, 631 S. 5th, TU 2-5225. MEN, housekeeping, everything furnished, 546, IJ4 N. 3rd, TU 4-6033, TU 4-9287, ROOM, BOARD. GENTLEMEN 1607 CRESCENT APARTMENTS FOR RENT 24 4 ROOMS, private balh, automatic wash er, 2 blocks to Main, TU 2-6886. VACANCY Park Court Apts., clean, new ly decorated, 503 Alameda, TU 4-7273. WARM, CLEAN, COMFORTABLE nished units with kitchens, low wi weekly-monthly rates, Esplanade Court Motel, 1605 Esplanade. FURNISHED 2 and 1 bedroom apts., Walnut Ave. 741 ONE bedroom duplex apt., furnished. Mills Add'n, water, garbage, TU 2-3194. THREE large rooms, beautifully fur. nished, new and modern, garage, adulls only, 525 N. 8th. NICELY lurnished 2 bedroom, 825 Lin coin, adults, no pels, TU 4-5692. FOUR apts, furnished, washing facilities, reasonable, inquire 1324 Oak, TU 2-62V8. ROYAL ARMS, clean nicely-furnished apt., 524 High Street. LARGE nicely furnished upstair: adults, all utilities, 122 Hillside. apt. CLEAN, furnished 2 room apartment. Utilities paid, shared balh, new owner! S45 mo 1842 Esplanade, TU 2-0329. ONE bedroom, 540 unfurnished, or $55 lurnished, TU 4-5686. ATT R ACT IVE downtown, adults, S65. TU 4-4522. FURNISHED 2 room apt., suitable lor 1 or 2 persons, 900 Owens, TU 4-5349. WALNUT APTsTyouwirflike this clean, cool a, comfortable apt,, private park ing, 415 Walnut. FURNISHED 1 bedroom dpi., 550, wash ing facilities, 2113 Gary, TU 2-5829. REX A RMS A PA R TM E NT SFurni shed 1 bedroom newly decorated. Heal, tele phone, garage paid. 540 . $42, TU 2-9217. ONE bedroom nicely furnished! sTTk drapes, automatic washer, near schools. Patio, yard, adults. TU 4-3764?, TU 4-3893. clean, newly decorated, downtown, utili. ,jeSt GrMr Apts f 71fl cnnurw - uuvvniuwrn I Klamath's most modern, furnished. 219 SO. 11th - TU 2-1062 I TWO one bedroom newly lurnished and decoraied apis. TU 4-6732. NEAR Weyerh7euserfurnVsrd.UMIitTer, steam heat, 540, TU 4-8313. HOUSE OF ROCKS MOTEL Hooms-Apts., daily, weekly rates. Reasonable. 2005 Biehn. TU 2-9130. $36 to $53750 I COMFORTABLE LIVING AT LOW COST! 0 j 1-3-3 bedroom aats , furnished or untur j msned Permanent maintenance included j Monday through Friday SHASTA VIEW APARTMENTS 1627 WASHBURN WAY Oflict hour! I a m. to tu ;) 3 pm. KLAMATH FALLS FINEST 2544 Union 1 A 2 bedroom apartments Furnished or unfurnished Soaoous Rooms Tastefully Oecorated Wall to Wall Carpeting Swimming Pool Rental includes all services eiceot telephone and electricity Do'Qthea Nolan TU 2-0766 RICKFALLS APARTMENTS and MOTEL 2660 Shasta Way One and Two Bedroom apts. Furnished and Unfurmjhed $69.50 to $89.50 Coily, Weekly Mctel Rntes TU 2-5577 HOUSES FOR RENT 24 two bedroom furnished, references, j' mos rent in advance. TU 4 5466 eves. . TWO bedroom houif with J bdroom basemtnt aoar'ment, hoth partially lur- n hM- ,?0. SJ5 N 11th. TU 2-4631 for 1 (HELP WANTED, MALE HOUSES FOR RENT 24 TWO bedroom unfurnished, clean, faxed yard, 1 1 acre, close to school and shoo, ping, 79.50. TU 4-5347. TWO bedroom duplex, water paid, cur. lams, drapes throughout, S7S mo. Tu 2 0240 after 4. CLEAN furnished, modern j209 Emerald, TU 2-067$. houie, iso. SMALL 4 room, cloie in, t3a partly fur nished; S3 furnished, 2201 Oak. 1 BEDROOM clean, spacious, nicely fur nished, 2SH Shasta, taO, TU 4-9513. 2 BEDROOM, like new. beautiful car peting, nice drapes, lovely lenced yard, doubie garage, workshop, unfurnished SI25, nicely furnished M0. TU 2-271 . ter 3 p.m. TU 4-6J19 weekends. MODERN 4 V. old 3 bedroom unlurn. Ished, S60, TU 2-2eo7, It) to 12 mornings. FURNISHED 1 bedroom, water. oarhT." U0 pels, TU 4-9497. MODERN roomy I bedroom houie, nice yard, we maintain yard, furnished or un furnished, nice neighborhood, 1932 Sum mery Lane. TU 2-1951. CLEAN unfurnished three bedroom noma available Sept. I, US, TU 2-4219 atter 10 a m. ONE bedroom furnished house, Mill7AcT dition, 160, TU 2-0451. ONE bedroom furnished, washing facil. ities, reasonable, 1324 Oak, TU 2-fi298. FOR rent three room house, parliytu7 nished, S35. Phone TU I 4-6227 after 4 p m. ONE room furnished f cabin,M7sOJ29 Division. UNFURNISHED-? bedroonT'home wash" er-dryer hookup, oil heal, South Subur ban area, TU 4-4658. 5 ROOMS, clean, walkinq distance down town, double garage, adults, TU 4-437. UNFURNIS HED t w obed roomTeVn , close in, gas equippea. Sloves, garage, water, garbage furnished. Adulls, no pets. $52.50, TU 4-4648. NICE dunlex at IBB4 Melrose. Hoi waler well, Adults, TU 4-4800. 2 BEDROOM near City Center, gas, gar) age.vacanl Aug. 15, TU 4-8773. THREE bedroom. bath, lease option, $125 mo., TU 2-5849. FIVE room 2081 White. unfurnished house, inquire DUPLEX unfurnished, 3 blocks from Main St. Adults, no pets. Electric heat, UNFURNISHED S50. 301 No. 3rd 4 5885. 2 bedroom, basement. Inquire 111 Pine, TU TWO bedroom unfurnished house in St Francis Park with small third bedroom, TU 2-0435, TU 4-5244. CLEAN, newly decorated, furnished 1 bedroom duplex apis., $50 & $55, closa in, inquire 821 Oak, TU 4-9123. EXCELLENT UN FURNI SHED 2 bed room, good district; water, yard main, fenance furnished, adults, no pets, 1530 Patterson. TU 2-18!?. MISC. PROPERTY TO LET .... 27 COMMERCIAL corner lot, suitable trail er sales, car lot, etc. 5. 6th & Madison. See The Resale House. FOR rent 6'.j acres Irrigated oasturp. head, month, etc. TU 4-5968. REAL ESTATE WANTED 28 WANTED desirable 2 or 3 bedroom fur nished, will rent or lease, TU 2-6B83 eves. WANTED to rent Aug. 20, clean 2 bed- room house, furnished, dining room. Teaching couple; no children. Writ Box 537C. Herald News. WANT 2 or 3 bedroom home. Have small business building wilh apt. on So. 6th down payment, TU 2-4378. RESPONSIBLE lamily wants to renl or lease three bedroom home by Sept. 1. Former homeowners, will lake good care of your property. Contact Phil Nelswan- news room. Herald and News, TU 11, between 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. WANT to rent or lease 2 or 3 bedroom unfurnished house. Preferably south sub- urbs. Reasonable rent. TU 2-679?. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE .... 29 "TRADE" and SAVE TAXES For information on tax FREE Trades, roll DEANE ijACHER Realtor Member International Traders Club Licensed-Ore., Cat., Ida.. Wash. TRADE - TRADE - TRADE Lovely home In South Suburbs. Nice sire living room, large lamily room, extra large kitchen, underground springing system - beautilully landscaped, situated on 91 x 180 lot. WANT - 3 bedroom home close In Mills or Hoi Springs. Total Price 316,500 McATEE REALTORS 339 E. Main TU 2-4646 TU 2-6815 TU Harold K. Hollis REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 30 THREE bedroom with 1300 sq. ft., I year old, only SI 4,900. New three bedroom in Winema Gardens, Henley District, $15, 900, TU 2-3177. CONGER School area, 2 bedrooms, base ment garage, lenced back yard, S500 down, 55700 total. TU 2-1322. 1700 CALHOUN building site, 100' x 120', sewer, lights, water paid. Terms. TU 4357. TWO bedroom home. Clean, large lot. new fence, owner, 59250, TU 2-4852. Immediate Possession 2 bedroom homo In South Suburban area close lo shopping Large Irrigated lot washer & dryer nook-UD In utility room Carpeted living room - 16900. Terms. $10,950 Large 3 bedroom home In SI. Francis Park Nearly new carpeting in 21 ft. living room - Cedar lined closets - Fireplace - Separate dining room - A really good buy at this price $5,000 Small 2 bedroom home near Wills school - Good starter home or rental Income Present renters over 1 year Terms. SOUTHERN OREGON Realty & Insurance 119 S. 6th St. Eves. Call Chtloqijm Branch office TU 2-4671 TU 2-0973 783-2313 MLS Multiple Listing Service PACIFIC TERRACE HOT WELL HEAT You'll note the true New Enotand styl of this home, a friendly neighborhood and overlooking the city oroper. Just right lor the family desirlnq gracious living at moderate cost. It had 3 bedrooms and bath uostairs. living room with fire place, d-ning room, kitchen, den, 'i bi'h downstairs. Full concrete basement, sor inkier svstem In front yard, and Klamath's famous HOT WATER heat! Plan for the tufu'e. then live it well in this love'y family home. Yours for only 110 000. Call today! Attention! G.I. or TRADER Whichever you are YOU will want to e this modm 3 bedroom home. Has Youngstown kitchen with dishwasher, I's baths, tirfoiace. utility room and a laraa living room. Bfit of all it Is available lor immediate possession, ho down G.I. plus Cicitng, I14.5C0. PEYTON ln,, B j5 Market "Pf" Plon? Al Hout rnalional Trade's Cluh TU 4-514? Evenings TU 2-M34 TU 4-7?M TU 2-4173 acooi'iimenl. Harold M. Ruih