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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1941)
March 20. 1941 THE NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. PAGE TEN Thursday I dropped in to th. CnM Lake Florists to lot thorn know tho color oi say now for mal, so ray torssfo would motch . . . And Corim Llndlsy told mo several now Idsas for snaking up corsages that I'm suro many sals would approci ato for tho Winter Dsncina Club doings Saturday . . . Phono 8433. Cal-Qie I THINK half the population of Klamath Falls must have turned up at Cal-Ore during the last week . . . (Well, any way, a lot of the population! . . . -Since it opened again last Friday. The turn out certainly indi cated In a big way that a great many people have been missing it ... I think this Idea of closing for a couple of months must be deliberate . . . Just to make everybody appreciate tho place more when it does re-open. And now I wish those friends of ours who visited us last month would come around again. Incidentally. Cal-Ore has a swell orchestra . . . Sam Her man's from Portland ... I danced to its music once upon a time at the Congress hotel and felt as if I were meeting an old friend at Cal-Ore. Beauty SUofx SO MANY people get per manents for Easter that I think this would be a very appropriate time to talk about hair . . . Because your hair won't take a good perman ent if it is dry and lifeless . . . In fact, it's a waste of money. As a lot of people know by now. Tve been taking hot oil treatments at the Medical Dental Beauty shop . . . And my hair has lost all the brittleness and colorlessness (if there is such a word) that had me wor ried for a while . . . Hot oil treatments under a steamer will re-condition your hair in no time. I've found. But if you get a machineless permanent, using Creme Oil solution, the hair re-conditioning process takes place with the wave . . . Ruby Engel told me about it the other day . . . This marvelous oil is steamed into your hair at the time the wave is made . . . And the permanent, using Creme Oil solution, isn't expensive ... At least, me Medical -Dental Beauty shop charges only $3.00. QaAeeloni n ID you know mat rosiona 1 1 has made several different 1 1 patterns to harmonize per II fectly with certain patterns of Spode dinnerware? . . . I knew of one kind But Pat Livingston told me about the others over our Wednesday afternoon drink, which was cof fee this week instead of a coke because of the snowstorm out side. The one I wrote about once last year is the exquisite Chintz pattern of Fostoria, made for tables set with Rosebud Chintz Spode ... A couple of friends of mine have combined the two and are the envy of the rest of us. Pat told me that the Fostoria pattern called Early American Waterford, in pressed glass, is manufactured to be used with the Spode pattern, Blue Tower . . . And that the Florence, Spode, should be used with Fos toria'! Azure Rondel ... Which has a soft blue tint that brings out the formal blue in the Flor ence and makes an utterly love ly table. Incidentally, she said that prices are going up regularly, new deliveries are very slow, and that if I were yearning to ward any pattern I had better get it now . . . Garcelon's will lay away anything you want, to be paid for on a budget plan, you know ... So wise gals couldn't be wiser than to act now, even if their hand bags are rather flat at the present time. We've gotten used to seeing hats that matched handbags, gloves and scarfs ... But here is new one . . . Earrings that are part of your hat ... For instance, you can have tiny vel vet bows as part of the trim ming on your hat. with a velvet ribbon swooping down to the ear lobe to and in another tiny bow clipped to the ear ... Or an enameled flower pin thrust through your hat just behind your ear it comet across the lobe and;Iooks like an earring. MaAtlta StOfU and SUopl T HELMA DAVIS Is back from the advanced beauty course conducted in San Francisco by the Helena Rubinstein Salon . . . And she's so full of the new things she's learned that it was a joy to see her. She told me she had never before understood the import ance of caring for the throatline . . . That this course showed her how relaxed muscles and sag ging skin under the chin start away back before a gal realizes what is happening ... In fact. everyone from 25 years old on up should pay attention to her throat. One thing she said was par ticularly interesting . . . That others see your throatline more often than you do . . . And while you may take great care of your face, all your beauty treatments may be nullified by the signs of age or carelessness around your throat Thelma really is getting to be quite an authority on cosmetics and beauty . . . Two years ago she attended the Helena Rubin stein "A" course, and this year was the only Oregon girl per mitted to take the advanced course . . . She torn me some oi the new things she had learned about make-up last week, and I know she'd be glad to share her knowledge with everyone who asks. By the way, don't fail to at tend Currin's open house on Friday and Saturday . . . There'll be all kinds of things for every one . . . Vance Vaupel has gotten in about a carload of samples to distribute, too . . . Well, there's an awfully lot of samples, but maybe not a car load. D O YOU remember the gtri I called Betty" ... The one who made over her livlngroom? . . . Well, her mother came to visit about a month ago and didn't let up until Betty promised to do some thing about her bathroom. The mother Insisted that she could always tell whatrkind of people her friends and acquaint ances were by the way their bathrooms looked . . . Because the bathroom is sort of a "hidden room" ... It isn't the room everybody sees immediately, but lots of people eventually do get to see it! . . . And a run down or messy bathroom, she said, is like a skeleton in the closet. She Looked Into If So Betty decided to go down to Big Basin Lumber company and investigate again . . . Her new streamlined livingroom was costing only about $7-00 a month, and she felt she could afford that much more for a bathroom she could be proud of. After she told me what she had learned at Big Basin, I talked to Ralph Howard and he , checked the figures to make . sure we both were rignt . . . Here it all is: She could get new plumbing fixtures put in, and the old ones taken out, for anywhere from $125 to $175, depending on the type . . . She chose some snazzy lavender colored ones that made the price $175 . . . But of course she could have picked out still more expensive fixtures . . . Some of the Hollywood stars spend several thousand dollars on bathtubs and things. Neat But Not Gaudy For the walls, she chose tile board instead of tile . . . Because it looks lovely and costs about a third as much . . . Depending upon how high she wanted it to go up the walls, the cost would be $40 to $50 . . . Put on . . . And the painting Job on the rest of the bathroom came to about $15. Then, of course, there had to be new linoleum on the floor, and that came to about $15, too . . . Laid and everything. All in all, it added up to a few cents more than $7.00 a month on the FHA loan that Big Basin put through for her . . . But she said she d save that by taking a small coke twice a month Instead of a dime one. ' What do you knew about ill . . . Officially, it's Spring . But your guess Is as good as mint . . Very Interesting country to live In, I d say. UTILITIES UP BUT MARKET HELD RAGGED NEW YORK. March 20 " Senior utility stocks bounded up ward In today's market and left a wide assortment of leaders struggling to maintain a sem blance of equilibrium. While favorites registered gains of 1 to 3 or more points, steels, motors and other pivotal sections moved over an uneven terrain from the start and most closed with somewhat ragged trends. A few relatively active inter vals put the day's volume at around 500,000 shares. Enlivening the power and light division were reports a number of holding companies were preparing to comply with the integration provisions of the securities act and liquidate most of their subsidiaries. The deduc tion was that the preferred is sues of these concerns would derive the principal benefits. The common stocks of such cor porations did virtually nothing. Individual shares elsewhere were aided by earnings state ments and prospects of better business in the future. Prominent shares on the ad vance, several touching new highs for the year or longer, were the preferreds of Standard Gas and Electric, Commonwealth and Southern. Electric Power and Light, American and For eign Power. American Power and Light. Engineers Public Service, Philadelphia company and Pub lic Service of New Jersey. Improved at one time or an other were Bethlehem Steel, Western Union, General Motors, Kennecott, Allied Chemical, Du Pont and Johns-Manville. Lagging the greater part of the session were U. S. Steel, Sears Roebuck. Chrysler, Inter national Nickel, Goodyear and Texas Corporation. Sun Oil pre ferred dropped more than 2. Utility loans tilted forward in the bond department. Today's quotations: Air Reduction - 371 Alaska Juneau , 4 s Al Chem & Dye 153 J American Can Allis-Chalmera 291 85! 27. 61 13! Am Car & Fdy Am Rad Sta San . Am Roll Mills Am Smelt & Ref . Am Tel & Tel Am Tob "B" Am Water Works Am Zinc L & S 401 1611 681 6 6i Anaconda Armour 111 . Atchison 244 41 241 31 151 351 781 Aviation Corp Bald Loco Bcndix Avia Beth Steel . Boeing Airp - 151 Borden Borge-Warner 191 17! 201 Is 6i 12 31 441 23i 38! 651 4 10 I 279 211 51 361 461 131 9 Calif Packing . Callahan Z L . Calumet Hec Canada Dry Canadian Pacific Cat Tractor Celanese Ches tc Ohio Chrysler Col Gas & El Com'l Solvents .. Comm'nw'lth & Consol Aircraft Sou f?nnnl Edison rnnni nil Cont'l Can Corn Products Crown Zellerbach Curtiss Wright Doug Aircraft . Dupont De N Eastman Kodak 741 28i 1341 El Pow & Lt 30! 321 35! 431 131 181 251 111 61 General Electric General Foods .... General Motors - Goodrich -- Goodyear Tire Gt Nor Ry pfd ... Greyhound Illinois Central Imp Copper ... . 11 Int Harvester . Int Nick Can Int Pap & P pfd . Int Tel & Tel 48 261 65 21 Johns Manville 611 341 Kennecott Lib O Ford Lockheed 35 231 321 Locw's Montgomery Ward 37 Nash-Kelv Nat'l Biscuit Nat'l Dairy Prod . Nat'l Dist National Lcsd N Y Central 4J 171 131 211 182 12! No Am Aviation .... 141 North Amer Co 151 Northern Pacific . Ohio Oil ... Otis Steel Pac Amer Fish Pac Gas & El Packard Motor Pan Amer Airways . Paramount Pic Penney (J C) Penna R R .... Phelps Dodge Phillips Pet Proctor & Gambia . Pub Svc N J Pullman ... Radio 6 81 81 8 271 2! 12! 121 80 231 30 381 841 251 241 41 Mabketi and fyUuztutial Carload Potato Shipments fdonth' V Season of 1840-41 Season of 1839-40 Mar to Season Mar. to Season Mar. B Dally Date to Date Daily Date to Data 1 g il iT 7104 31 31 6128 2 I 4 45 7103 I 38 37 8181 3 iT 67 7i:o" 6 73 3167 K 32 88 7152 2S 89 3193 5 31 120 71S3 33 133 8226 U 51 171 7234 29 181 5253 1 40 211 7274 38 197 3291 B 53 269 7332 vT" 244 3338 8 I o 2li 7333 36 282 8376 10 43 Sli 7374" 296 ' 8390 U 4I 5ii 77l5 33 329 8423 47 399 7482 38 388 13 48 447 TSi0 39 397 3491 I 37 484 7547 443 8537 " I "If. Til 7384 38 483 8578 16 I 5 all TSS 2t 811 8608 17 I 1 3M 7o32 838 3616 18 I 23 592 7655 38 860 3634 19 2T tlt 76T9- 32 812 3706 20 41 853 5747 2l 37 890 3784 22 38 728 5822 23 33 768 5860 24 r 773 5867 25 51 824 5918 26 48 870 3964 27 44 914 6008 28 44 958 6052 29 44 1002 6096 SO 34 1036 B13i) 31 ' 10 108 I 6140 Shipments by Truck Grand Totals Republic Steel .. Richfield Oil .-. Safeway Stores Sears Roebuck Shell Union 19 81 39 731 121 Socony Vacuum Sou Cal Edison Southern Pacific S perry Corp Standard Brands Stand Oil Calif Stand Oil Ind Stand Oil N J Stone & Webster . - 81 - 251 - 91 - 331 61 ..191 261 - 351 71 - 351 41 671 131 771 Texas Corp Trans-America Union Carbide .. Union Oil Calif Union Pacific United Airlines 131 381 11 4 661 23 891 57 27 31 United Aircraft United Corporation United Drug United Fruit U S Rubber U S Rubber pfd U S Steel Vanadium Warner Pictures Western Union 22 Westinghouse 961 Woolworth 3U In an effort to save all gaso line for the war effort, both Germany and England are re verting to human-powered means of transportation. Recently seen In Europe was a battery-driven car, which speeds along at 30 miles an hour. 'MADE IN AMERICA' "Somewhere In England" an American-made fortius plane, called "Tomahawk" by the Britons. Is unloaded after shipment from U. 8. This Is a view of the fusel are being lifted out of Its crate by a huge crane, 321 1367 8461 POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO, March 20 (AP USDA) Potatoes: 3 Califor nia, 0 Oregon, 2 Florida arrived. 16 unbroken, 20 broken cars on track; market iteady; prices un changed. LOS ANGELES, March 20 AP-USDA Potatoes: 2 Califor nia, 4 Idaho arrived; 12 unbrok en, IB broken cars on track; by truck 6 California, 3 Utah ar rived; market steady; Oregon Prides, No. 1, large, few SI. 13. CHICAGO. March 20 (AP USDA) Potatoes, arrivals 158; on track 612; total US shipments 898; old stock, supplies very heavy; demand on best quality Idaho Russet and Western and Northern Triumphs fair, other varieties all sections demand light, market steady; Idaho Rus set Burbanks US No. 1 1.40-55; Minnesota and North Dakota cobblers 85-90 per cent US No. 1 quality 95c; Early Ohios 80 per cent US No. 1 quality 92ftc; Bliss Triumphs 75 per cent or more US No. 1 quality 90c-1.13; new stock, supplies moderate, demand very light, market steady. I put old newspapers Inside the overcoat of my uniform. That way I keep warm. King Christian of Denmark. T CLOSES ST LOSSES CHICAGO, March 20 0D Wheat prices fluctuated over a range of as much as 1 i cents to day, at one time equaling or bet tering the 1941 highs recorded yesterday, but closed with net losses ranging up to a cent a bushel. Most of the weakness was due to profit taking which was stlnv ulated by the recent price up turn and reports of increased marketings of loan wheat in some sections. While official figures were not available, some trade Interests expressed belief redemptions the past week In creased substantially. Wheat closed 1-1 cent lower than yesterday. May SBi-tc, July 831-ic: corn l ie down. May 641 63c, July 63c; oats un changed to Ic lower. Portland Produce FORTtAMV Mt4i SB ( AP arTTItR frtou: A irmil tw lb.. In pffhm wrprn; W In ratrton; P ral lie la pthhmml riira. JM tm certoaa, HITTKIOAT rt'U 'lililj. nailmum . of I pr mil rtiHtJ, tirlitrrrtl foHlafttl Ul.,e lt.; r"Htim I'talit. naitmun nf .U of I pt-r if til rMity, MMtl lb.; tsIIvv route and ci hi n try point. M ku; aoniM qtiahty. 1 unlrr flrt. t'llKK-ti: Hrlling .nr U PurtlttKt r taller; HIUik lrU'M, lie lb. : loaf. rtf U'.: tfllel Id wholraalm 1M lb.; kMf TOc lb. f.-..b. Tli:amo..k. Mltt-t I'ticri U prtMlufor! A Urg. ITi : II Urg IrV : A m'tllum Hr ; H milium H !.; RiaU tu rr taller 4 hitlirf ftif rairaj rrtuM V higher, liMMItV Mt'tT - tuning prtf to rUllm: rmmtry killH hog, twil hitlrh era. ISA-lift Iim.. Illa-laV; -!, twrj. ITS lc; liglil thin. 13 hr. 13 ; lambt. 1 rmp i;vllg Ih. ; l I If ih.; gH oitirr ll lb., eanr rxiw. 11 ir Ih.; hulla HUSO lb. II VK 1U I.TKY - Muling prtrtt No. 1 trail I! t.rn t.n.llrri. IS to t lb.. I?c; frjfr. nn4r I Iba., ITS: priagrra S 4 lb.. fSe. ratra. oV b "-. 19 Lrghorn twna. iiti'lr IS tt 14c. r SS Ibt , lie: rbrl km I . iTc; hrni to 1 Lba.. IHr; eld roaiatrra, He lb. lag prirt-i: H-m Tl m lb : t'n o;ie lb. OMt-Orgu Uanvtra. Il.tflJs pr Ih. bug. riTtir - K Hawaii an !. fwr SI Ih. VWt.U !4 pT lb etaU; rrhiit . 1. 1 4 : lrltf Dm rhutra hraml t 41; Klamath $tM-9 crrl: irl-flM Klamath l JO. HAY - Krlhng prW tm trarha: A If alt. n. . inn t..fi; nat-lrtr-h. BlOAt, I.mi; WltUm'!! Vallr rkvr 10H toa; Urn oOr, raatrTv Oregon $17 00 toa. WOOIt Itll rontrart. Orrgnfi rtarfi. nnmifial Kt Ato tb. ; if 40 Mtm Oragna rang M Ko tb. J rrniibrM. U SSe lb. f 1Yltlmlt rlly. I? month R4-.V lb. IIMH:i-rafra fa bf. IH1 bull lr; kip list lb. SO. S. F. LIVESTOCK SO. SAN FRANCISCO. March 20 (JD (Federal-State Market News) HOGS, salable 200: around Se higher; about two loads 103 202 lb. Oregons $9.20. package IDS lb. Californias 19.03, sows $6.25. CATTLE, salable 25; largely steady; loadlots steers, heifers and range cows absent; mostly dairy cow run, half load 1107 lb. Ilolstelns $7.00; bulls nom inally $7,008.00. Calves, sal able 8; steady; few good 170 lb. vealers $12.30, few head $10.00 11.00. SHEEP, salable SO; lambs nom inal; good to choice wooled quot ed $11.25; spring lambs quoted $12.00-12.30; package medium to good 122 lb. ewes $8.90, weak. Pigeon Cove, Mass., contains a house built entirely of news papers, excepting the frame, windows and floors. SPECIAL ON PERMANENT WAVES 2 For th. j Prlc. of I ORLEAN'S Beauty Shop 40S Main fhone 727S S5 Mcculloch motor co 194 a a.i. a. - KT ... Rita Croons, but I T Msybe Tyrone Power was thinking of wife Annnlwlln. lor while Rita Hayworth was looking at him dark and riunnriiiu.lv like tlili, crooning suit melodies and stiumming tlie guiliir. he Ml ailcep. Or maybe it was just bccauM Uie script oidcrrd It that way. POTATOES LEAD IN II Carlot shipments of Orrgon fruits and vegetables for Feb ruary dropped 800 below those of the previous month, with 1624t carloads Inspected and certified In February, reports the stat. department of agri culture federal-state shipping point office. Trucklot Inspec tions numbered BOB In February and B4S In January. Potatoes and onions led the list last month, with 911 and1 232i cars respectively. Other carload movements, the February Inspection records show, included 222 carloads of apples: 32i carloads brined cher ries; 200s pears; 10 mixed fruits; 8i berries; 8 onion sets; 1 mixed vegetables, and I car bulbs. It takes 10 seconds for 12 parachutists of the army to Jump out of a plane: 80 seconds later they land; In two seconds more they have complete control of themselves; and 80 seconds later open fir. with machine guns. Th. new Martin B-28, "The Flying Torpedo," a bl-motorcd plane. Is equipped with four bladed propellers. The ship Is reported to be faster than many of the single-seater pursuit planes Eczema Itching Burning Distress osts omenta iaii and com pout V aulfrrrr ran I U put up IMa hortrat olfrr of aatliTaraton or mcmr liiirtnf th" at Tlyr Ihotitanrla uf hot II of Mnonr'a Kwrald Oil hat hf n Mtl for uat aurh Iroubltaom aittraftlly raitaaH Ik In -ivli!kni lii In onr tlriiiilal tAtHy otj H mall original Haiti rf Rmoralrl OU ltd ii srt rllrrrtVrt. Voti'U fl rf ll'f qnlrke-f Itinn von tvrr fitMrtrrt aiding nturt, II Urp pmmiit faalcr hftallng. Art ti-wffty on etir attaint fiiirint of H-fntl.-r. or m.'.ne ti.rV. "Preach the Word" la the plan of service followed by DR. R. L. POWELL who it holding services this week at th. FIRST IAPTIST CHURCH 8th and Washington Sts. His subject tonight Is "Th. Greatest Battl. of This Earth" rairaiiri' iTnYWra rs ... . Champion Business Coup. Tyrone Yawns , i A i - ii. J, WOOL MARKET nOSTOM. March 20 (AP USDA There was very llttl. demand fur domestic wools In the Boston market tooay. Many buyers were waiting until th new government contracts ar. awarded lit order tu determine their future requirement for domestic wools. Prices paid for fine wools recent ly contracted In the territory wool states wer. estimated by the trade at mostly II I 11.1 scoured basis, landed In Boston. A high forehead docs not In dicate Increased intelligence when we compare one human being with another. To Commemorate Our I Ith Anniversary offers you ONE LOVELY PRINT ONE METAL FRAME ALL FOR 75c Only This offer is In qrslilud. to YOU, our customers, for eleven years of sue cesiful business. Kennell-Ellis U. S. Bank Building 8th at Main Tot. 3252 ""HAPPY OWNERS lew... M"""-Ha, rid. ""'-y'ow.. ,prl.o. M0r,B,o-wh.n you ,tod. , tmm a.' r''. IMI- . '".7. a"-" MI-aj" Phon. 4149