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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1963)
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon PAGE-OC BASIN BONANZA MRS. HOWREY ROBERTS and Mrs. Walter Hitter of Dairy spent Tuesday in Lake view and visited Mrs. Eva Roberts and Mrs. Ritler's aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Post. MRS. ISABELLE HESEL TINE has returned home after k major surgery at Klamath Val "ley Hospital. Her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hoylman, Grants Pass, spent the weekend and she will stay for several weeks with her mother. MRS. NEVA GROHS had as visitors for a month, her moth er, Mrs. Lu McReynolds, and her sister, Mrs. Selrna Furber, Midland. j 'FRANK REEVES is home on leave with his wite, Fern, and small daughter, Cindy Lee. He ispent the past 13 months at Okinawa and willl report to Camp Pendleton, his Marine base, on Nov. 11, LINDA ORERHEIDE and Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Courtright of Eugene spent the weekend with Linda's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Oberheide. VERNON HALEY of Portland spent Tuesday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Haley. MR. AND MRS. MERRILL STEWART left Tuesday for Es condido wliere they will spend the winter months. MR. AND MRS. TED STE PHENS had as recent visitors, their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clint Stephens, and family, Emmett, Idaho; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McBride, Mrs. Martha Merrill, and Beth McBride, all of Btirley, Idaho, and Mr. and Mrs. Estel Perrin, Ontario, Ore. MRS. JOHN BROWN will host a shower for Debbie Lynn, new daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam "Davis of Boise. Gifts will be brought unwrapped and wrapped for a prize at the party. Rela tives and friends arc invited BLM Seeks Fence Bids PORTLAND Bids on a fenc ing; project scheduled by the Bureau of Land Management in Harney, Luke, and Malheur counties will be opened on Nov. 1 at 2 p.m. in the Field Adminis trative Office of the bureau in Portland. Construction will Involve ap proximately 189 miles of barbed wire fence on the public domain in the three counties. Thirty sep arate projects arc involved, ranging from .5 to 30 miles. Tlie work is set aside for small business concerns, and bidders are required to furnish all labor, transportation, equip ment, and supplies, except the actual construction materials which will be furnished by BLM. Additional information on the fencing project may be obtained from the BLM oflico in Port land or from the BLM district managers in Burns, Lakevicw, and Vale. NOT ENOUGH NEW YORK (irPl) - Al though women are able In color their shoes any of 120 different colors with a new mix and match product, a woman in Los Angeles wrote Irving J. Bott ner, president of a shoe care products firm: "I wish you'd add more col ors to your line. Women love variety because tliey are so fickle." Luncheon at the WINEMA! A R e a I Treat While Shopping Downtown. And remember the cocktail hour 5:30 to 6:30. A wonderful way to relax after shopping downtown. Winema Motor Hotel 1111 Main Street Wednesday, October 23, 1963 BRIEFS Wednesday, Oct. 23, at 2 p.m. MR. AND MRS. LELAND CKISS and daughter, Susan, of Roseburg spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bud Steven son and Mary Anne. MRS. LLOYD GIFT, Mrs. Bill Burnett and Mrs. Les Lcavitt went to Malin on Monday to vis it Mrs. Herman Vowell. In the afternoon they visited Mrs. Ida Casebecr, who is improving steadily Irom her long illness and able to be out of her wheel chair part of the time. MR. AND MRS. LYNDEN WALKER of Central Point spent a few days in Langell Valley with Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Set tle. . MR. AND MRS. K E R M I T KEVSOR had as visitors for a few days, her cousin, Edmund Fenske, and his wife from Di- nuba, Calif. HOWREY ROBERTS is a pa tient at Hillside Hospital. BOB ADAMS and Dick Moore flew from Rupert, Idaho, to spend the day with Mrs. Evea Adams, Bob's mother. MR. AND MRS. BOB PAR SONS of Roseville and George Leggett of Roseburg are visiting their sister, Mrs. Hugh Lee, and family of Langell Valley. J. E. HOUSE spent a few days at Mcdford with his broth er and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. I. House. FORT KLAMATH MRS. R. O. VARNUM re turned Oct. II from a 10-duy stay in Portland with her daugh ter and family, the Alvin H. Sin ners. Mrs. Sinner was recuperat ing from a tonsillectomy per formed when her mother arrived to care for the family. DONNA SCOTT, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Scott, sustained a broken collarbone in an accidental fall while playing recently at the local elementa ry school. WESTON II. ENGI.E is em ployed at Sequoia National Park at Three Rivers, Calif., as a general equipment operator, in stead of general manager as slated in a recent brief. H i s brother and family, the Clifford Englcs, have moved into the res idence of their mother, Mrs. Harry Engle, who accompanied her son, Weston, and grandson, Wayne, to their new location. MRS. RAYMOND VAN WOlt MER, accompanied by Mrs. Edythe Dcffenbacher of Chilo quin, went to Reno last week to bring Mrs. Dcffcnbachcr's sis ter, Mrs. Norman Wimer, and Mrs. Anton Zadina to Chiloquin. The latter two aro clerk a n d postmaster, respectively, at the Chiloquin Post Office and had attended the National Postmas ters Convention at Honolulu. Aft er returning to San Francisco, they went by jel to Reno to vis It Mrs. Van Wormcr's father, Leo Peters, and her brother and family. HISTORICAL RKER NEWARK, N. .1. (UPli-Reer has been around for as long as recorded history, and most of it was not only consumed in the home, but made there, accord ing to Leonard Fauiel, official of P. Ballantinc and Sons, brew ers. "The first New World brew ery," said Faupcl, "was built in the early l"lh century, near the present New York financial sec tion, but William Penn made his own beer and so did George Washington. One American w rit er said In 1810: "llcer is now lite common table drink of every family in easy circumstances." Macmillan's Program Shows . By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Last April, with one eye on tlie British voter and the other on Britain's dawdling economy Prime Minister Harold Macmil lan's government cut taxes and launched an impressive pro gram to stimulate industry. From an economic stand point, the program has lived up to the hopes of its planners. Last week Britain's industrial production index hit a new high, and UPI's London financial edi tor, Harry Hobbs, reported Brit ain "still in the process of steady expansion." . Heavy Communist purchases of grain have sent freight rates skyrocketing, and long-depressed shipping firms now are earning fat profits. Shipbuilding has come to life under the stimulus of govern ment credit for new tonnage. Eases Credit The Bank of England has eased credit restrictions to per mit close to a billion dollars in fresh money to be made avail able to industrial and individual borrowers. The stock market, which had hesitated as Conservative party leaders squabbled over the selection of a man to fill the prime minister's post left va cant by the ailing Macmillan, resumed Its advance and closed out the week at a new high for the year. Exports were continuing their steady rise. A further sign of economic health was the fact the govern ment permitted several million pounds sterling to leave the country for investment in a new nylon plant in West Germany. This was a direct reversal of previous policy, which had limited British industrial invest ment to the sterling area unless it could be shown profits would ffr0e-PHILCO "WALTZ THRU WASH DAY" with this efficient, tow-priced PHILCO-BENDIX 4-CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER 2-YEAR GUARANTEE Kilrn warranli la nriinl t'S pur ift for 3 i(t piitrhai frr irhii( nt t rhilw'l oilKn tfiir rWin Itaniporlatmn. tmif rwi ihnr iliarifi aW rtmthtO c( mv purl plertiv In ml'il fir uittnmhip rtrl iflnrnrH fhmiiih Philf n dml. f ulrthtttor rrtunitaiirtn W231 M.J, J.'IM.I. iJWAIMVJJ 11" overall Hiar mens, acrren. Handsome white cabinet with soulpturrd details and acvents. Convenient earning handle. Huilt in teloacoping Pivotenna. Philm Cofil Cbmi war im w movto ffijl'l TuHNeml fy '' 6th start coming back within IB months. Throughout the country, un employment which had been a cause of mounting concern only six months ago, was declining steadily. All of this was good news for Britain, and under other cir cumstances the Conservatives logically might well expect some rewards from the voters. Trials Beset Party But the trials which have be set the Conservatives for many months, including a string of losses in by-elections for scats in parliament, continue to plague them. President Charles de Gaulle's Anita Brings You Special Values for Downtown Harvest Days THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY All Items in the Store - All Depts. ALL REG. 1.99 ITEMS ALL REG. 2.99 ITEMS ANITA SHOPS 707 MAIN Features New LUUaJULli DE632V Reg. 189.95 159 95 Criii Crois Tumbling Prevents Tangling 12-lb. Capacity Safe it for all Fabrics Gentle Heat 95 $5,00 Down m T here your dollar buys MILES more v OPEN 8:00 A.M. & Pine brusque veto of British mem bership in the European Com mon Market dealt a heavy blow to the Macmillan government's prestige. The Profumo sex scan dal and the attendant overtones of potential danger to national security further undermined confidence. Macmillan's illness and the en suing scramble for power within the party created a picture of disunity which bodes further ill for attempts to convince British voters that the Conservatives should remain in power. The reaction to the selection of tall, gaunt, 60-year-old Lord Home to become Macmillan's successor had a familiar ring. $1.59'2!$300 $2.59'2i$500 OPEN FRIDAYS UNTIL 9:00 WorU r. Th Vvb,ws i" ANCE ...... r ZT.A"lm' Mi) Philco-Bendix Undertow Agitator Which operates 6 to 10 times faster than blade agitators and washes cleanerl ONLY LOOK AT THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES Big 12 lb. capacity, cleans 7 sheets in same load 4 automatic cycles, 2 speeds Color coded single knob control; easy to set (or any fabric 3-way Agi-Spin Rinse agitates as it rinses soil away; keeps wash clean Automatic water saver -269,sr JUt Cahinet line styling gives built-in appearanre. Top tilts up for easy cleaning underneath. Pin point heat controls Timed appliance outlet. Finished to match contemporary speaker and controls Philco Cooi 23" mM A lira.. TO 6:00 P.M. Ph TU 4-8109 Gains Even among Conservatives it was that he was a nonentity, a pleasant fellow who could not stand up to the hurly burly of the prime minister's job, a man of no popular appeal. The same reaction had greeted his appointment as foreign minis ter in 1960. In that post, Lord Home fooled all but his admirers, who included Macmillan. As a negotiator with the Russians he proved tough and able. As a member of the British cab inet he has gained increasing respect. But If that job was tough, it was nothing compared to the one he has now. $10.00 Down mm 10.00 down walnut furniture Out-front Chassis heats TV heat. (0195 Jim Spike Manager The combined buying power of this and our other stores now make it possible to buy in quantities bigger than ever. This means we can buy for less and pass even greater savings on to you. The proof is in the low prices. Just look at these examples. WE GUARANTEE THESE TO BE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN! 1 EST. i IS SHOE WAREHOUSE 230 Main St. - Across From Willard Hotel LOW MCIS ON IUI ITU NO. 247 WAS 12.99 Save another 2.00 on this 8" neoprene cushion crepe wedge soled boot. A real boot for wear for work or play. Sizes 6-13. NEW LOW PRICE 1 aaaaaaaaauuau NO. 567 WAS 12.99 You can save $2.00 on the popular 8" Wellington with long wearing oil-resistant sole. Sizes 6 to 13 in your choice of black or brown. NEW LOW PRICE 1 aaaaaaaaanann NO. 153 WAS 11.99 Comfortable 6" cushion crepe soled boot that's oil resistant. Sizes 6 to 13 in ton only. Sove $2.00. NEW LOW PRICE 99 NO. 302 WAS 10.99 Here's our Black Calf service station ox ford. Oil resistant sole makes it wearablt anywhere you work around oil and grease. NEW LOW PRICE 8 oes 99 99