HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Fall. Ore. Thureday, October 19. 19SS PAGE 7C BASIN BRIEFS BONANZA MR. AND MRS. EVERETT SPARKS, her son. Bill, and his fiancee, Anne Deverell. Port land, are visiting Everett's moth er, Mrs. Mary Sparks, and broth er, Lloyd. REV. AND MRS. WESLEY MENG and three sons have moved to Langell Valley Irom Portland, where he is the new' minister of the Lorella Full Gos pel Church. MR. AND MRS. FRED GROIIS of Los Angeles, here for the hunt ing season, are spending two weeks with relatives. IVAN WELCH of Grants Pass is visiting his son. Ralph Welch. Langell Valley, and son. Donald Welch, at Kingsley Field. MRS. RUBY BROWN has re turned to her home in Langell Valley from Klamath Valley Hos pital. MR. AND MRS. JACK SHAW of Scaramento were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Burnett. Jack's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Haley Shaw, formerly owned a ranch in Langell Valley and now own the Pinehurst Mo tel at Weed. MRS. NED, GROIIS suffered a broken leg when her horse fell with her while riding for cattle on Sept. 30. MRS. LIZZIE SCHMOR, former resident now living at Turner, and her daughter, Mrs. Clay Corn best, visited relatives and friends last week. MR. AND MRS. RALPH VA- DEN had as weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Thompson, all of Broadlcnt, Ore., and Ken Swatzlander, Justing Swatzlander and Bob Carr, all of Medford PETE HODGES and Art Kat tennorn ot Sacramento were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leavitt. REV. AND MRS. J. HENRY THOMAS have returned to their home in San Mateo after visiting tneir son, Reg Thomas, and family. They came for the mar riage of their granddaughter, Margee Thomas, to Scott Wooten. Reverend Thomas officiated. .MR. AND LOUIS MONROE SR. and Mr. and Mrs. Don Fulk and children of Cave Junction were overnight guests at Mr. and Mrs. Paul Monroe. They were here for the Wooten-Thomas wedding. MR. AND MRS. MIKE DEAR BORN took son Paul to Eugene where he will be a freshman at the University of Oregon. Thev went on to Portland to visit friends before returning home. KATHY KECK, OTI student, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Charles Keck. i MR. AND MRS. CHARLES NICHOLS of Upland, Calif., spent a few days in Langell Valley with their daughter, Mrs. Pete Kid well, and family. MR. AND MRS. JACK MET- LER of Klamath Falls and her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Williams, Portland spent the weekend with their daughters, Mrs. George Keady and Mrs. Wayne Yancey, and families. MR. AND MRS. DEE CHAN DLER of Lakeview and Mr. and Mrs. Gale Chandler of Pendleton were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Les Leavitt on Monday. They were former Lan gell Valley residents. old Bonanza Post Office on Thurs day, Oct. 10, starting at 10 a.m. Rummage may be left with Es ther Brown or Norma Haskins. MR. AND MRS. DEWEY HORN are spending a few days at Coos Bay with their niece, Mrs. Delbery Kincaid, and family. A G NA R JORDANGER re ceived word of the death of his brother. Axel Jordanger, in Nor way. He was 95 years old and had not been sick until two weeks before his death. Agnar's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rasmus Jordanger. have returned to their home at Johnstown, Colo. MRS. EVA Chervl Smith Lakeview. ROBERTS and spent Wednesday Kit hahi) bukneit, a senior at Chico State College, spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Burnett. He was accompanied by Bard Debrowski of Redding. MR. AND MRS. ALBERT JOHNSON have returned to their home in Portland after spending a few days in Langell Valley with Mr. and Mrs. Mike Dearborn and Ted. MR. AND MRS. BILL HAYES JR., and Cindy of Livermore vis ited his sister, Mrs. Art Struve, and family. MRS. BOB CAHILL, Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Thompson of Merrill attended funeral services in Red Bouff Sept. 23 lor Shanna Heinz, a former Malin girl. MRS. JUNE NORK Is visiting her 5ister at Phoenix, Ariz. She was there for the wedding of her niece. LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE ggggr I I I rr"i JC ' Jiff jpjj g I I I I AV-KWOCM I i i i i I 1 Better Grades 11 "4. : Survey And Resurvey And Resurvey Text M3S '94S BVONiriro nowum: sfl 'XDOiaVd f '3dld 'C '133HM 'Z '3NIHDVW ONI l-UMOfj -iOAvgg '6 'SIXS '8 'D01D i "IHWaNIM '9 "llVd '5 '31SVd 'C 'MVS33S "l noay -'SilSMSNV BOB CAHILL has returned BONANZA WOMEN'S CLUB home from a few days' visit w ill hold a rummage sale at the I in San Francisco. Oregon Motorists Speed Toward Record Road Toll By The Reading Laboratory Written for Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Perhaps this article should be called "survey and resurvey and resurvey and resurvey." Because that's just the way to handle a textbook chapter. After you've surveyed the text book and the first unit of the book, you're ready to start on the first chapter. Begin with a rapid survey of the main ideas in tne cnaptcr: read the sum mary if there is one; look at the maps and graphs; read the pic ture captions and read the larg est size bold type. Even if your chapter is 50 pages, it won't take you more than S or 10 min utes to survey for the main idea. Stop for a minute after the first survey and try to place the chap- jtcr into the context of the book as a wnuie. ftMt yoursen now impor tant the chapter is, 'what effects the material will have on the de velopment of subsequent chap ters. Then survey again. Cover all of the bold piint this time. You'll begin to get a stronger grasp of the main ideas; it'll only take an-1 otner couple of minutes. And then survey again, just reading the first sentences of each para graph. You'll start to pick up the secondary ideas. After your third survey, skim through the entire text very rap idly. Don't pay much attention to details; just get a stronger pic ture of the subordinate thought. Be sure you place them in the context of the main ideas. One more skimming is all that's necessary. This time make a light pencil mark next to impor tant details that may require paragraph memorization hclore an exam. For stronei. Brasn 0r subordi- And mats all mere is 10 ii. nate th0uchta - skim throuch rvouce, yuu miuuki hcvi-i n.ulbodv of , nor ne detaus. through a chapter faster this way, too. You can survey live or six times in the time it takes to plod through word-by-word. Let's sum up the method: For main Ideas maps. graphs, picture captions, chap ter summary and largest bold type. For stronger grasp of main idea all bold type. To pick out subordinate thoughts first sentence of each through every word of the chap-: ter from beginning to end. Chances are, that kind of read ing will take a long time and get you confused; you'll end up with a maze of facts and no idea what the entire chapter is about. But by surveying the chapter several times, digging a little deeper each time, you'll always get a clear picture of everything in the chapter, By working from the very general down to the very particular, you'll get every fact in its proper place. Compre hension and retention will be no problem. Most students find they can get For complete comprehension HOME FIRES BOSTON (UPI) Dwelling fires have cost U. S. homeowners more than $300 million yearly since 1958, the National Fire Pro tection Association reports. More than 500,000 homes were dam aged or destroyed each year. skim again, checking off de tails that may require memoriza tion. (Next: How to use map and graphs.) SALEM I UPI Oregon motor ists are headed, throttle open, for the worst traffic death toll in the state's history. Nobody knows why. In the first eight months of this year 420 persons were killed in Orpcon highway crashes 70 more tnan were Kinea in me same period last year. Oregon's average toll for Oc tober, November and December SPOOK-OUTS" START AT THE BON BAZAAR HALLOWEEN MASKS LOTS OF DIFFERENT ONES FROM 10', SEE OUR SPOOKY COLLECTION OF HALLOWEEN COSTUMES BLACK & ORANGE CREPE PAPER FOR DECORATIONS BUYS IN YARDGAGE DEFENDER PRINTS Reg. 59c yd. 3$ 00 yds. I REDHEART, 4 ply YARN Reg. 1.29 97 DRIP DRY COTTON DOTTED SWISS REG. n AAC KLAMATH PELICAN RED Sweatshirts JOIN THE CROWD WEARING THESE BOLD NEW PEL BOOSTER SHIRTS $3.98 VALUE! $298 J & P COATES THREAD SPECIAL AS SHOWN ON TV REG. 1.50 $1119 II TOYS ARLINGTON DOUBLE BED SINGLE CONTROL ELECTRIC BLANKET $(9)98 ONE YEAR WARRANTY has been 45 a month for the past five years. This means the 1963 toll could top 550. The present record was set in 1959 when 492 were killed. For the same eight - month period this year Idaho reported 150 highway deaths down 49 from last year. Washington recorded 451 deaths through Sept. 30 this year down 12 from last year. In Nevada the toll was up 19 to 139 for the first eight months of the year. California Toll Huge And in auto-crowded California, the toll or the first eight months of 1963 stood at 3,101, up 131 from last year's toll. Contrary to popular belief, there has been more travel in Oregon this year than last when throngs of motorists roared over Oregon's pavement en route to the worlds fair in Seattle. The Traffic Safety Division of the Slate Department of Motor Vehicles said 6.2 billion travel miles were recorded during the first eight months of this year, compared with 5.9 billion for the same period a year ago. The death rate people killed for each 109 million miles of travel for the first eight months of this year was 5.9, and for the same period last year was 5.1. Vinita Howard, assistant mana ger of the traffic safety division, 1 admits "the odds are against Ore gon's toll remaining below 500 this year." She refused to pre dict how high it might go. "We don't know why, we don't know what's causing the increase in deaths," she admitted. "There have been more one-car crashes, but there has only been a 4 1-2 per cent increase in acci dents. The accidents seem to be more severe. People seem to be driving at higher rates of speed." She wouldn't speculate that speed was the cause, however. "We just don't know what is causing the increase in deaths." 83 HUBLEY'S METAL TOYS THEY'RE REG. $1 TOYS NOW JUST Wi ho.t 90l stUcrlon el lei Truem, neo I loddcr, dump trucks, airplanes, l" end Hoi Iff r . ADVENTURl-CLAMiu 3C BOOKS JUST RECEIVED! Large Shipment of Jig-Saw Punles 29 BOYS' WINTER JACKETS SOME WITH HOODS, SOME WITHOUT SSL $098 up DOMINION 2-SLICE TOASTER TOAST POPS UP EXTRA HIGH. COLOR CONTROL SELECTOR. EASY TO CLEAN. VALUE S1A98 Model 1135 10 COLORING BOOKS (NEW SELECTION) 10V1 low Prices PLUS W4: Green Stamps In i i r Film Star Will Marry FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., (UPH Actress June AUyson and California hair stylist Glenn Maxwell took out a marriage li cense here today for a wedding planned Saturday at Miami Beach. "Oh, I'm so excited," the beam ing motion picture star told re porters. The two planned originally to lake out the license Tuesday in Miami, but there was a hitch when Dade County officials aaid Maxwell would have to have the final decree of his divorce from his first wife. He said he hadn't brought it. With the wedding scheduled for J p.m. Saturday at the All Souls Episcopal Church at Miami Beach, and a four-day waiting period re quired by Florida law, the wed ding seemed olf a second time for the pair. They had planned marriage in August, but Miss Al lyson was advised hy lawyers lo await the settling of the estale of her late husband, actor Dick Powell. Miss Allyson, 40, arrived in Miami with her two children, Pam, 15, and Ricky, 12, who will be attendants at the wedding, which a spokesman said would be "simple and small. Maxwell, 31, i. owner of two men's hair alyling shops at New port Beach, Calif. "Better Grades" Reader Service co Herald and News Box 941 Klamath Falls, Oregon Please send me copies of 30 DAYS TO BETTER GRADES at $1 each. Name Address '. City State .............. Duck Hunters WELCOME TO THE Ponderosa Room In The Willord Hotel Dance to the music of WILBUR and SATCH Delicious Buffet Lunch Out-of-the-World Steaks loch tvtning Exctpt Sunday r - ' - - ' -- - -. - - PH I LCO OF VALUES FIRESTONE TV 19" TV, bench, cushion. ODUCTSI even the candles! ALL FOR THIS LOW FALL FESTIVAL PRICE . fl (I Get this I 19 lnch 0,"r" ""'' ,0"" II f JJJr Q I 30-SS-38 DELUXE MODEL 19 I Beautiful eonwlt TV c hi not flnlirwd to match wilnut fumlturt Diniih modern btneh In iralntd wtlnut finish Comforublt cuthion. SI H" long. 17 V wtdt. 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