Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 21, 1947, Page 12, Image 12

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    -Title (Growers Review Year
TULELAKE A meeting
of Uie
members of the Tulelalte Growers
association was culled by Its board
o( directors to review activities ol
the association since its annual
meeting lust December and to con
ilder nhins and activities of the aa
anclatlon durlns Uie rest of this year.
16 members, officials and guests
were present. The meeting was held
In the American Legion hall, Tuie
Ulre. at 8:00 d. in.. June 18.
President C. J. Main presided and
gave a report on activities of the
' association during the past six
months. Mr. Main emphasised uie
Importance of the bccompllshments
which the association has been able
to achieve and winch are oi vaiue
to agriculture in mis area.
Farm ExDerlment
He colnted out that Uie local farm
experiment plot Is now In operation
on Bureau oi Kcciamauou iuuu
across the highway from Tulelake
and represents a beginning of a
wnrth-whlle project that should
hfinff flmnnrtAnt results and expand
ed work in the future should result
in vaiiiahl information to growers.
The association has cooperated
with the University or California
the state department of agriculture,
and the agriculture extension service
in Initiating studies and work in Uie
control of Insects to reduce virus
diseases In potatoes. Dr. D. D. Jen
sen. University entomologist. Is
making a survey of aphids to de
termine effective 'control methods.
This work will continue with larger
areas and increasea personnel.
The association cooperated with
state department of agriculture of
ficials In bringing to the attention
of the state legislature the need for
a permanent fund to Insure con
tinuity and adequate financing for
state operated seed potato test plots
at San Mateo ana Liceansiae. n
fornU. Through leadership of State
Senator Harold Powers, an appro
bation of t25.0O0.OO has been made
for the revolving fund. Negotiations
have been completed for the use oi a
suitable track of land at Oceanside
for seed potato test plots to carry
on the long range program In this
field. , '
Problems In obtaining refrigerator
cars, grain cars, commercial ferti
liser, improved services from gov
ernment in the operation, of the
. potato price support program have
requlrea euori ana nave uici, wiui
some success.
Labor Center
Tulelake Growers association has
equipped and operated a labor sup
ply center at Camp Newell during
the past year, and is doing so again
this year. Plans have been made
and work is being done to operate
a permanent housing center for
farm laborers for the Tulelake area
of the basin. .To attract the more
desirable farm workers to work here
during the needed periods, requires
adequate housing, equipment, utili
ties and camp management A full
time camp manager has been em
ployed, effective July 1 oi tnis year.
Mr. Joe Rittig. presenUy employed
by the war food administration in
Oregon, and who has had several
years experience in charge pi farm
labor camps, including Mexican na
tional camps in the Klamath basin
during the war, wiu oe tne associa
tion's labor camp manager on a year
r; nd basis. This action is justified
by the extent of general repair and
preparation oi ouuoings ana equip
ment, in addition to operation,
maintenance, and management.
To Get Warehouses
The assication has, been notified
by Bureau of Reclamation officials
that it is the intention of that
agency to award the five large ware
houses located at Camp Newell, and
upon Southern Pacific company s
land, to this growers association.
The terms of the proposed award
agreement provides that priority be
given to new homesteaders and
World War II veterans for a period
of three years. New machinery and
equipment lor weighing, dumping,
loading and storage of grain has
been purchased by the association
and will be installed and ready for
use ay narvest time this year. Mr.
A. L. Wagner, who has managed the
faciiic supply cooperatives Tuie
lake warehouse, cleaning and load'
ing operations for the past few
years, has been employed by the
Tulelake Growers association
- manager of all warehousing opera
tions on a full time basis. Mr.' Wag
ner wui Degin work about July is.
Spud Department
Borne consideration was given to
the advantages of effectuating a po
tato marketing agreement. No ac
tion was taken on this matter, but
iurtner study will be made as to the
expediency of entering into such
program for this reason.
It was thought that it is too early
to make specific recommendations
relative to harvest wages. Too many
variable factors might enter into
wage scales that may be proposed
at this time.
A number of new Tulelake home
steaders attended the meeting. A
spokesman for this group. Mr. Paul
Rogers, informed the meeting of the
extreme need for roads in the new
homestead area, and solicited sup
port of the Growers association in
obtaining congressional action for
funds to build and maintain the
needed roads. Growers voted unan-
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO FAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Lota oi Time
Permanent Besaltil
DR. E. M. MARSHA
... Cblropractle Pbriiclan
Wi N. Ilh E.qulre Tbeatrt Bids
Phone 7066
Heavy Machinery Hoists Heavy Logs
These huje pine and fir logs, some several feet in diameter, hare
been estimated by an expert scaler as to the number of board feet in
each and are ready to be hoisted from the 14-wheel lumber truck by
tremendous power-driven crane and dropped Into the water of I'pper
Klamath lake. Only a few short hours before they stood tn lofty majesty
in the Rofoe River national forest
Missing Cameraman Still
Mystery. After 37 Years
The Herald and News office had a
isitor vesterday who asked a ques
tion some of the city's old-timers
might be able to answer. He was
Norris Goode, editor of two small
town weeklies in south central Illi
nois, who was briefly a resident of
Klamath Falls back in 1911.
During a six months stay here.
Goode worked on The News, and it
was because of his newspaper work
that he came In contact witn a
photographer sometime during the
winter of 1910-11. His acquaintance
with the man, whose name he has
forgotten, was short lived, for one
cold winter day the photographer
set out on snowshoes from uie edge
of town toward Crater lake, never
to return.
It was the man s Intention to take
pictures of Crater lake in all the
beauty of winter. The trip was dan
aero us. but the man liked to take
good pictures, so he set out with a
pack oi oianxets ana gruo ana two
cameras.
Goode saw him off at the edge of
town. He was, quite possibly, the last
man ever to see rum, lor tne coia
and the snow and the emptiness
swallowed him up. Weeks, later a
Lsearch party stumbled onto one of
tne man s came-as ana some oi nis
photographic plates, but there was
no trace of the man.
Months later, in June to be exact.
Goode had to leave for the east due
to the Illness of his mother. He left
before the snows had thawed suffl-
-
imously to adopt a resolution re
questing federal funds for this road
work construction and Improvement.
The Tulelake Growers association
is committed to an extensive serv
ice program for assisting individual
growers where organized effort is
required, and to cooperate with
other community agencies and or
ganizations to develop and promote
the general welfare of the people in
the Tulelake area of the Klamath
basin. Opportunities for a wide
range of services exists. With a
strong membership, sufficient fi
nances, and sound leadership this
growers organization faces the chal-
enge to assist in solving some of
the common problems that are now.
and will, continue to be a part of
the farmers' difficulties.
ciently around Crater lake to permit
a tnorougn searcn oi tne area. He.
too. virtually disappeared. This visit
36 years later is the first since then.
So today he was back, and he
wanted to know what happened to
the man he saw off on a long Jour
ney -ut of sheer curiosity he had
never before seen a man walk on
snowshoes and he wanted to see
how they worked.
We couldnt help him out. If any
of you can. write him In care of the
Virden Recorder. Vlrden. Illinois.
Methodist
Minister Dies
PORTLAND, June 21 iP Oregon
Methodists, saddened by the death
of Bishop Bruce R. Baxter, went into
closing sessions of the annual state
conference here today.
Named as delegates to the Mctho
dist general conference at Boston
next year were Dr. Roy Fedge, super
intendent of the Salem district, and
the Rev. Owen J. Beadles, Portland.
Lay delegates will be Mrs. Clarence
Meeker, Medford, and Ernest Peter
son. Portland.
Ministerial delecates for the tiirU,
dlctional conference of the western
states will be the Rev. Laurence E.
Nye. Portland, the Rev. Ralph Kleen,
head of the new life movement of
the Oregon conference. Lay dele
gates will be Dr. Edward L. Clark,
president oi Multnomah college,
Portland: William R. Thomas. Le-
oanon. ana juage Walter C. Wins,
low. Salem.
fta. jfta. J&a. jSa, Sai jSa.
An entertaining day
is in store for
those people
attending the
Klamath Regatta.
PHONE
t
f
V
?
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Yl08 S. 8th St. Phone 5401 V
!
A Aetna ,
A Life Insurance Co. JL
t T
J Hartford, Conn.
0. E. "Tommy"
inuMnuN
Radio Sale
'
0 iro vro.
REDUCTIONS
TABLE MODELS PORTABLES
COMBINATION RADIO PHONO
MODELS
Pelican RADIO Store
HOME GARAGE
118 Old Fort Rd. Phone 7034
Bring your 'car where all
work is guaranteed.
We specialize In
. Motor Rebuilding and "
Tune-ups
Valve Grinding - Reborlng
' Brake Work
Generator and Starter
Rebuilding
fleam Cleaning Auto Fainting-
THE- DOCTOR WHO
PRESCRIBES FISHING
TRIPS IS MORE
POPULAR THAN 'THE
ONE WHO ADVISES
RUG BEATING
119 So. 5th
Dial 6232
RADIOS
Table, Cabinet Models,
Combination radio phono
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20 Discount
Lampman Day
Honors Editor
GOLD HILL, June SI (An state
and prominent publlo officials
flocked Into this small Southern
Oregon town today to honor Ben
Hur Lampmnii, a.vioclate editor of
the Oregonlan and publisher from
1913 to 1616 of the weekly Gold
Hill News
It was here that Ltunnmnii wrote
the first of the editorials and fish
ing articles that were tc carry him
to national fame.
Mayor Ralph E. Bell officially
proclaimed It Ben Hur Lampmnn
dav. On the schedule were a salmon
bake, potato races, sack races, a
country d...ice and a tobacco-spitting
contest.
Invited were Governor Rnell:
Palmer Hovt. ex-mibllsher of the
Oregonlan and present publisher of
the Denver Post: ex-Oovs. Oswald
West and Ben W. Olcott: Authors
Stewart Holbrook, Ernet Hoycox
and Robert Ormond Case; and
ottrs in nubile life.
Th Oolri Hill bund the Mfvtfnrri
sheriff's posse and a delegation
from the Orecon Cavemen of
Grants Pass also . wer- to be
hand.
Carson Urges
More Shipping
PORTLAND, Ore., June 31 (At
Despite the huge numbers of war
built ships, the U. a. mini add an
other 3,600.000 tons of shipping to
maintain Its place In foreign com
merce. Joseph K, Carson, Portland,
member of the maritime commis
sion, said yesterday.
He told delegates to the Pacific
const board of liiler-itoveriinieiital
relations that the ships many of
them for specific purposes were
important for national defense.
Delegates also heard that Indus
trial unemployment on the coast
was double that of the rest of the
nation, Fay Hunter, realonal di
rector of the employment service.
said 10 per cent of the Industrial
labor force In Oregon. Washington
and California was out of a Job.
Mm Mary Hutchinson, regional
representative of the bureau of em
ployment security, said, however,
that the Paclflo Northwest was far
ing better than California In em.
ployment.
Both siieakers added lhat food
processing and construction had
not developed the Jobs they had expected.
WiaAl B o mil, ' MWIUt. II, Jt.t, f
on
Oreaon Reo'ors
Back Sn'es Tax
PORTLANTV June 31 ii A
cemnainn bv the Oregon Association
of Real Estate Boards In aupnort
of the proposed 3 per. cent slate
sales tax was under way todav.
Fourteen real estate boards from
over the s'ate had delegates here
vesterdav for the kick-off meeting
in which Rep. Earl Hill of Lane
county, campaign manager, urged
them to "Bo home and oninnliu."
for the October 7 election on the
Rose Festival
Queen To Wed
PORTLAND. June 31 i'i The
oueen of this year's Rose Festival,
Oeorgene Ormston. 18. will be mar
ried here July 30 to Rsvmonri Petter
son. navy veteran whom she has
known since grade srhool davs.'
Miss Ormston said both plan to
attend the University of Oregon next
fall.
Observation Shows Blank
Spots In Star Pattern
nv J. liliflll PHl'liT
Ailraumr, al.u.ln Mlvltlon. Oifiun
llllhtr tiamallaa Iiiiik
A clear, moonless sky, viewed from
a highland vantage ground far away
from the Interference of city Il
lumination, gives one the ui'iinol
liuiiiesslou that the tlitimiiietil
above Is everywhere crowded with
siars. A careful Inspection, however,
uf certain regions will reveal dark
rifts and almost starless spots III
tertwliied here and there among the
radiant hosts,
Late In (he evening at this time of
year, the Milky Way atretcltra lis
faint, white bund ol imiltlttutrs ol
vory distant stars entirely across the
summer sky, But It Is not a con
tinuous ribbon of delicate light, for
thorn are many Irregularities In Its
great slum. Beginning near Dcurb,
at the head of the Northern Cnws.
there Is a pronounced division which
continues to the Scorpion deep In
the south where its d irknrss Is ac
centuated by the surrounding rich
ness oi tne miikv way, a rirnness
which the late Professor Barnard
described as ''stars piled up In cu
mulus masses like summer clouds."
Continuously below the southern
hnrlson as seen from our latliiiile,
there Is a dark snot beside the fam
ous Southern Cross known as the
Coal Sack. This region la as wide si
10 full imwna and as long as 111.
Within Its boundaries oiuy one
nnkcil-eve slur can be seen, ami
that a verv taint one. II Is sulil lliat
llila dark spot was llrst noticed by
I'lnson In MW). When the aalnmo
mer llcrsi hel saw It, he eKclulnird,
"Here Is truly a a hole In heaven I
Isabel Lewis of llin Naval otwerva.
lorv suys It "uppcnis like an abyss
of 'inky blackness . . against the
In IkIU bni'kKioiinil of the star clouds
of the Milky Way."
There are iiiuny lesser almost
starless regions In the heavens. In
cluding one near the Northern
Cross. A small one III Ophliu hlls Is
liaied like a distinct letler H.
There are others In Orion, one being
known us the Horse lleud iirbulu.
At one time It was Ihoiiglil Ihnl
tlieso regions were ailiinllv open
ings among the stars through which
nil til dwellers could see out Into Ills
infinitudes of space beyond. Poetical
us Is tills Idea, present ilnv studies
reveal that the dimkv places are
vu.it clouds of obscuring matter
TRUCKS AND PICKUPS
FOR RENT
You Drlva-Lona. Short Trips
Move Younelf Seva t
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 1304 1301 East Main
dark nebulae ititui.......i .
dual, Which hide Uie slaia M4
behind them. The dlMan l'L?1 '.
of these clouds are only a i P"l
m I'll 'a"-.' vi.in mini ,M,r .
tern so that the Milky w.v 5I'n
where they appear la eniLrn
sciirod. Any stars tlmi ' ''' Uk
these regions am neater to n! Vl
the ilm k nebulae, 11 Ulan
nul lum! ( stuilles nt ,!,, ... , t
showed Hint many of m,,.- :""
were faintly lumliioii, .',,,,u"
imidc at Uie llarvnnl nMi,.!,,!Pl
station in the highland, mS'-I
revealed Mint nil Imd ,i ,i,p"U
liniiliinsltv. Without m,,..T7i?
clouds the Milky Wuy ,! k
leas be more uniform, inn wlb ;
be as Interesting? U
Citrus fruit funnels ciii,,.,..
keep their orchards werd.jj?1,
spraying dlrael oil on ww), J,,
lliev gel more than fmu lurlia,
Student's Young
Son Drowns
EUOENE. June 31 iTt James O.
Ooodwln Jr., 3. drowned In the Wil
lamette river here yesterday: He
apparently had wandered to the
river from his nearby home. The
father Is a University of Oregon
law school student.
RUG CLEANING
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
Conveniently Cleaned In Your Home
Latest Equipment and Methods
RHOADS CLEANING SERVICE
Telephone 6411
Serving the Basin Area Hlnre 1014
fully Inaurril
sOMCo
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Immediate Delivery-.
Window!
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Mouldlnf '
Trim
Store Fixture,
Coblnett
Doors
Frame!
Hardware
Garage Doors
Southern Oregon
Manufacturing Co.
Ill Peyne
Ph. 7S6I
(ft v"
Put
find
IT struck us as a happy phrase the
first time we used it in our adver
tising. Certainly, no other eight words quite
so neatly express how this trim and
tidy Buick underlines the coming
thing in automobile styling.
Now come those who say we don't
do justice to a great car and a great
buy when we stress outward looks
alone.
How about what this car can do?"
they want to know. "Maybe style
makes folks want a Buick, but it's per
formance that makes 'em mighty glad
they insisted on getting one."
Lift the bonnet for a good look1
and you quickly see why.
There's a big straight-eight
power plant that fills the hood
practically to overflowing.
tunt In HBNRY J. TAYIOR, Mutual Httwoik, Mondayi and trldayi
you'll
of its
a micrometer on it, and
that in a whole handful
dimensions it is made to closer toler
ances than even an airplane power
plant.
It's a valvc-in-hcaJ engine, which
means it's more efficient in basic
design and it makes the most of
that with Fireball combustion that'
squeezes the most good out of each
tiny fuel charge.
Finally, it's topped off with Buick's
special Accurite cylinder finish, a
Buick exclusive that makes this
honey ready to ramble the minute
you get it and keeps it young, lively
f
to come
and eager over thousands on
sands of active miles.
fireball power alone is enough to
make this America's most wanted
automobile yet here in Buick are
style, and size, and room, and the
matchless gentleness of an all -coil
springing ride.
For your money why not get them
all? Placing your order now makes
certain that you will and you'll find
the same friendjy, courteous help in
getting a Buick soon-as-possible
whether o'r not you have a car to
trade.
- WMIesidew
ONLY BUICK HAS ALL THESE
Aim OIL 'INDIA'S nUltALL POVVIA
ILIJIWIIOHT FUTONS lor ftoih
Infraction, iwlfl ruponit, rtductd
load on baorlngi.
UCOt SPRINQINO - Buick.
dtvfllopad olpcoil ipringlnp for pir
pclual imoothnoii and "pa til h try all"
rldt.
$ILtNT ZONt BODY MOUNTINGS
rUU-LINOTH TORQUl-WBi DflfVI
led, will he luttnllM tt eitra fAet e ioim itellal
i
ACCUHtl crifNDM IOAINO -moothnati
from the Hart and
nglns thai "itayi young,"
unm-mtA smnma
IftOADftfM UNMtS
STIPON f ADKNO SXAKI
DffpsilX if AT CUSHIONS
CtM-AKOUNO f UMPfftS
NINI SMART MODUS - In ihrM
urltl, Italurlng Body by Flihtr.
H.E.H AUGER
1330 Main
'24 Years Your Buick Dealer'
Phone 5151