Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 07, 1963, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE (A
HERALD ANT
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TIME TO DECORATE Shrine Club members get busy with banners and Hlllah Tern.
l l.'tn'tM in nrAnArxtinn fnr thfl oaa ShrlnA Club HilLK Hi. Lite on Saturdav eva
ninq, Nov. 9, in the Klamath
6:30, dinner at 7:30, and will conclude with dancing to music by Baldy s Band. Com
mittee workers are shown with Joa Hicks, left, and Al Aldrich, in the front, and
standing, Al Nyback, club president, Bill Milne, Floyd Stone, Hubert Totton, and Wil
son Wiley, chairman.
Indian Feast
A number of Klamath Basin
people will attend the fourth an
nual Indian Thanksgiving Feast
at La Grande, Sunday, Nov. 10.
Dinner will be at 1:30 p.m.
.The citizens of La Grande and
community and the Confederat
ed Tribes of the Umatilla Res
ervation are o-hosts for the
significant occasion which
brings both Indians and whites
to the feast table.
Every effort, the invitation
stresses, will be made to ad
here to the way in which thanks
were expressed to the Divine
Creator on that first Thanksgiv
ing Day, thanks with equality
and understanding.
All are welcome to the feast.
As at the first day of thanks,
there will be no charge. All will
share equally the responsibility
of providing food.
The menu, planned by a joint
Solons Rap
Dismissal
By United Press international
The State Department's dis
missal of security officer Otto
V. Otcpka came under fire to
day from the Senate.
Otcpka, head of the eval
uation division of the Slate De
partment's security office, was
fired on charges he gave Sen
ate investigators confidential in
formation from employe loyalty
files.
Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D
Conn., said the firing was an
affront to the "Senate as a
whole." Sen. J. Strom Thur
mond, D-S.C, said It destroyed
the government's system of
checks and balances.
In a letter to Otcpka, the
Stale Department accused him
of conduct "unbecoming" a dip.
lomat. It said his dismissal was
based primarily on two factors:
Ho violated a 1948 preslden
tial directive by giving loyalty
file information to investigators
from the Senate Internal secur
ity subcommittee.
Voters OK
School Bonds
VANCOUVER, Wash. (UPD -Three
building bond Issues total
ing more than $2 million were
passed by voters hero and in
the nearby Evergreen School
District Tuesday.
A bond Issue to provide funds
lo build a now oily hall and po
lice 6talion passed by 61 per
rent 3,184 to 1,991. It required
60 per cent to pass.
A second cily issue, or con
struction of a new parks and
recreation building, passed by a
M per cent majority 3,226 to
1,898.
T1 Evergreen bond issue, for
construction of schools, passed
by 70 per cent 1.0S5 yes to 41S
no. It amounts to $7fl6,ooo.
Toe new city hall v ill cost
1.5 million and the parks and
recreation building will cost
$460,000.
ypt'TIIS FINED
1LUKA, Israel (UPli Eight
youths, all Jewish religious
zealots, wore fined and given
suspended jail sentences Mon
day for rioting in a Christian
school in September.
They were given the choice of
a $175 fine or 60 days In jail
and nine-month suspended sen
tences. Tliey were also placed
under H0 bond for three years
against their good behavior.
NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon
A J'lS. ,
v T j
s?
V
Auditorium, the evening will
Will Attract Area People
committee, will include roasted
venison, roasted turkey with
dressing, salmon, Indian roots
and special delicacies, cole
slatv, tossed green salad, green
beans with bacon, baked beans,
olives and pickles, cottage
Crow "Attends"
Grade School
MOUNT VERNON, Wash.
(UPI) Tho kids have said it
for years: "School is for the
the birds."
This Is a fact at Jefferson
school bcrc. A large black crow
has joined the youngsters on the
school playground.
Tho crow flies in before the
morning bell, rides the merry-go-round,
climbs tlio monkey
bars and hangs around until the
youngsters go into their classes.
Then he flics away and doesn't
return until morning recess.
Says School Principal Herb
Walser, "I guess you might say
our students have something to
crow about."
fT GLEEM J fLm
n TfiATHDACTC S
ff j I W 1 1 II HJIk
TV TRAY SETS
RED HEART
KNITTING WORSTED
4-Ply
Reg.
$1.29
DOTTED COTTON
SWISS
Poitel Colors
Reg. 49c yd.
INDIAN HEAD OD fiK
Thursday. November 7, 1963
((SsWsWsJWIWWWWsW'WHMWPI'iWWWW
.V liW I V I ' w
start with a cocktail hour at
cheese, cranberries, huckleber
ries, assorted pies, cupcakes,
apple dessert, bread, rolls, jam
jelly, coffee and punch.
An interesting program is
planned. A freewill offering will
bo taken to pay for use of the
armory, coflee, punch and inci
dentals. Any remaining money
will be placed in the "award
fund" to be given to the win
ners in the many competitive
arts during the Fifth Annual
Indian Festival of Arts at La
Grande, June 25 - 28.
Television Station KOIN-TV,
Portland, will film portions of
the event which has gained no
tice throughout the nation.
City Briefs
ARTHUR MYERS of 2220 Ap
plegate has been a patient In
the Barnes Veterans Hospital,
Vancouver, Wash., since Oct. 29
and will remain for an indefi
nite time. Cards will reach him
in care of the hospital.
at BON BAZAAR
OV7V
SNOW
SHOVELS
100's
ANACIN
Reg. $1.25
TOYS
ALL OVER THE
PLACE
COMING!
USE OUR
LAY-AWAY
KING SIZE
From
97c
.,.$100
Eisenhower
Memoirs
Published
WASHINGTON (UPD "Man
date for Change," the first in
stallment of Dwight D. Eisen
hower's memoirs of his White
House years, was published to
dayanother landmark in the
former president's highly suc
cessful literary career.
The 650-page book has been
chosen as a selection of the
Literary Guild Book Club. Ad
vance installments have ap
peared serially in a number of
major newspapers over the past
few weeks. Both of these fac
tors almost insure it will be a
best-seller, perhaps on a scale
equaling that of his first book,
"Crusade in Europe."
It was the enormously popu
lar "Crusade in Europe" that
gave Eisenhower a measure of
financial independence. The
proceeds from that book went
toward purchase of his farm at
Gettysburg, Pa., the first home
he has owned after years of
living on Army posts around
the world.
Eisenhower deals with the
first term of his eight-year
(1953-61) administration in the
current book. The second term
will be covered in another' vol
ume planned for publication
late next year.
The early critical consensus
on "Mandate for Change" ap
peared to be that while the for
mer president has described the
great and momentous events of
his first four years in the While
House, he just as carefully has
omitted all of the colorful de
tails. The meat is there, but the
juice is gone.
Crash Claims
Bank Official
PORTLAND (UPI) - James
A. Randall, 59, Portland bank
official, died in a one-car acci
dent Tuesday night.
He was vice president and
manager of the Portland Branch
of the San Francisco Federal
Reserve Bank.
Randall's car struck an over
pass pillar. There were no skid
marks and police said he may
have suffered a heart attack.
Kalamazoo, Mich., has been
called the "Celery Capital" of
the Union.
- s. v rsJiVt!
V-VVll
Butt"
i
s: tinnADT ctvi t . I' 'in
HAIR
& MORE IN
1
3
1
i SI
1
BEAN BAG - SAFETY HEAT RESISTANT
ASH ' flc CUPS &
TRAYS Juitjca BQWLS
STYROFOAM mix or match
SHAPES FOR 4)f C FXTflr
DECORATIONS J
Low, Low Prices PLUS
OUR, ANCESTORS
mm
IT
(J U U U j
4 1
hi:isj R-wi I um
"A career In elevator operating Is the coming thing!
No automatic device can ever replace rriei"
Local Winners Return
From Portland Contest
Local winners in the 13
"Make It Yourself With Wool
Contest," Carolyn Conn, Lake
view, junior division and My
rene Cunningham, Merrill, stu
dent at Southern Oregon Col
lege, senior division, and their
escorts have returned from
state competition in Portland.
Stale winners were from
Portland and Enterprise. They
will go to Washington for com
petition with winners in t h e
Washington Council. Winners
from this contest are entered in
the national to be held in Al
buquerque, N.M., in January.
Each entrant in the stale con
test, regardless of placing, re
ceived a skirt length of woo!
material.
Those who accompanied the
two girls were Mrs. Harold
Williams, Bonanza, district con
test chairman, Harold Williams;
Mrs. Charles Cunningham, Mer
rill; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
J. O'Connor, Merrill; Mr. and
Mrs. William O'Keefe, Mr. and
Mrs. Cannon, Tulelake, and
Bryant Williams, Klamath
Falls.
The local slyle revue was
Oct. 27 in the cily library audi
torium. Runnersup were Con
nie May Oliva, Malin, senior,
SPRAY
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
m
1
itJ plus m
M tax M
Good assortment. Box of 21,
Gold 'n Slim, Mfg's list
f tTiig (1ST
79c
price $2.
OUR PRICE
OTHERS AT LOW PRICES
Green Stamps
ly Quincy
? r r-
7St
and Cheryl Horn, Henley, jun
ior. The "Make It Yourself With
Wool Contest" is sponsored by
the Women's Auxiliary to the
National Wool Growers Asso
ciation and the American Wool
Council.
PENNEY'S
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
I 8th and Main
Open Doily
9:30-5:30
Monday & Friday
Open Till
in
3 pors; cushion crepe r .
B 4,0 10' 6.99 I' for the worst kind of weather
jyiCtil ! : ' Here's the best kind of buy. . . j
i .RUBBER "!
Buttons on leather H
jvat "kSi uppers; cushion
Vu sole. AA 5 to 10, . . .. 1
W-- Glove leather up-
Tiwiv.vv peri; cushion crepe
jfcl&U sole. AA 5 to II.
kn B 4 m II. n AA
f' " ?
FORT KLAMATH
MRS. M DIXIE WALKER of
Gold Hill is a guest at the
ranch home of Mr. and Mrs.
William Brewer. Mrs. Walker
and Mrs. Brewer have been
friends since childhood.
MR. AND MRS. FRED NO
VALK of Palo Alto were here
for the Oct. 26 funeral of her
grandmother, Mrs. Lulu Dar
ling, who died Oct. 24 at her
home on the William Brewer
ranch. Mrs. Novak is ihe for
mer Daria Brewer. Also home
for the final rites in Klamath
Falls was Lyle Brewer, who
is attending Southern Oregon
College in Ashland.
MR. AND MRS. WVNN B.
HESCOCK announce the arrival
of their first child, Cheryl Ann,
born Oct. 21 at Klamath Valley
Hospital.
MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM
ZUMBRUN, accompanied by
Mrs. E. M. Brattain, attended
the annual stock show at t h e
Cow Palace in San Francisco,
returning here Sunday evening,
Nov. 3. Also going south for the
show were Mr. and Mrs. Stew
art Nicholson and the Edwin
Scotts.
MRS. CECILE VAN IDER
STINE has closed her Wood
Fort Laurens W'as the only
fort erected in Ohio during t h e
American Revolution. It is near
Bolivar, Ohio.
Rubber uppers and
soles; fleecy cotton
lining; 4 buckles.
Block. II to 2.
Rubber uppers and i"farS fcx, " , JiEL itfS
--,, .trap I M. aWOTU FW fS S
Trniie. Mill 1 to l. ff :S8Sl " ! m At 1
3.99 i ,:im x
Supple gbe lea
ther; cushion crepe
sole B 4 to 10.
9.99
StrMchoble rubber
ith toe cap and
rubber Itning. N 6
14 M 6 10 14.
2.99
Li3hte.pht' Eosv
I'D 1'iiie railef'cr:
:or!on linmn.
M ft
14, W 6 to 14
5.9?
Work. go!asKs y.:h
net lining Marsh g-ev
loe cap W 6 'o 14
4 buc,.
BASIN BRIEFS
River motel property u n ti 1
the intervening months at Stock
ton with her twin sister and
husband, the Allen Summers.
The Summers came here to
take Mrs. Van Iderstine south.
GRETCHEN WILSON, daugh
ter of Carl F. Wilson of T h e
Wilson Cottages, has trans
ferred from Southern Oregon
College in Ashland to OTI in
Klamath Falls.
' NEW PINE CREEK
KATHRYN DICK scholarship
turkey dinner will be held at
the Eastside Grange Hall on
Friday evening, Nov. 8. Serving
will start at 6 o'clock and
continue until the crowds stop
coming. Tickets for the dinner
will be $1.25 for adults and 75
cents for children. The commit
tee says the dinner will be an
"all you can eat" affair.
.MRS. VIRGINIA HINTON
was taken to the hospital last
Wednesday and was still con
fined there over the weekend,
according to a report received
here Monday. She was suffering
from nervous tension and was
in traction for a while. Other
complications have added to her
distress.
MR. AND MRS. TRUMAN
LAWSON had a bad S u n d a y
night, she reported the next
day. About 3:30 a.m. she was
awakened by a noise and im
agined hearing a horse whinny
Cuff
on leather up
cushion crepe
B4 to 10.
6.99,
OOTWEA
FOR ALLT
FAMILY!
FROM ONLY
Now'i tho tims for all th fomily to get tho$ "bad-weother-foot-protector"
that none of us dare to be
withoutl Yet, now'i the time to get to Penney't . . . and
SAVE! For the kids . . . waterproof protection from long
life rubber that loves rough 'n tough wear. For Mom
and teenage daughter . . . light 'n flexible black glove
leather boots especially designed for keeping toes
toasty warm. And for Dad . . . rubbers or boots, stretch
ohs, iip-ups, or buckles, fleecy cotton or net lined Big
bvys any way you look at 'em .
L'ght.e.g'-t -
ce v.crk r u
ing. When almost back to sleep,
she distinctly heard the sound
again. Upon investigation, she
found a horse owned by a neigh
bor, Gordon Harris, bogged
down in their cess-pool and un
able to extricate itself. So at
4 a.m. the Lawsons were up,
and Lawson used his mechani
cal hoist to lift the 1,400-pound
animal trom its helpless plight.
DAIRY
BONANZA HOME EXTEN
SION I'NIT members are re
minded of the Nov. 12 meeting
at 10:30 a.m. at the Bonanza Li
brary. Hostesses will be Lura
Urbachand Averiall Willis.
Leaders for the project, Scandi
navian ccokery and customs,
will be Phyllis Reid and Lu r a
L'rbach. Newcomers and others
interested are invited to attend.
Symptoms of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
due to EXCESS ACID
QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST
Ovpr fiv million pnekapi of the
WILLAPO TREATMENT have been sold
(or relirl oi symptom 0l diires irwmg (rom
ttomach and Duodtnil Uicer duf tn Ex
cel, Acid-Poor Dig titlon. Sour or Upwt
Stomach, Gnuln.H, Heartburn, Sltcp
letinett. te., due to Eicms Acid. AiW for
"WHIard'i MraE" which fully explaina
Lhu Iwme ireatmenl free at
CURRIN'S FOR DRUGS
PAY-LESS DRUG CO.
SUBURBAN DRUG CO.
WAGGONER DRUG CO.
Moulded plastic up
per and sole; elas
tic loop closure,
Red, brown, white.
zes 6 to 3. Wom-
4 to 10.
2.99
To buckle work run
ner, red cleated out
vole 0"d tomg W 6
4.99
stretch.
b b t r.
R
HE
CAR WASH
Monday thru 1 OC
- Thursdoy I a3
rl. and Sat. 1.S0
Op.n till i
Sparkle Car Wash
4023 V. Siarli
2) 73 9
:ieoied cutso'e. w 6
36" Wids
Solid Colors
Rg. 89c yd,
to 12.
4.49
5 buck.it
8.99
CHARGE IT!
4480 South 6th
Next to Oregon Food
91oo up u h ys