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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1954)
FRIDAY, AUGUST 13. 1954 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEN BASIN BRIEFS Bly Frolici will be held Au gust 14 and 15. starting with a street dance on Bly School Street at 9 p.m. Saturday. Sunday's ac tivities will be held at Sprague Canyon Recreation area three miles east ot Bly. Lakeview Richard J. Hobart, gunner's mate third class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. George J. Hobart of Lakeview. participated in the annual Seattle "Seafair" and visited Seattle. Tacoma, Ev erett and Bellingham. Washing ton. He is serving aboard the heavy cruiser USS Helena. Malin Park will be the site ol the North and South Dakota pic nic Sunday, August 15. starting about noon. Potluck. Bring own table service. Coifee furnished. Games in the afternoon. From Salem James D. Olson nf the Salem Capital Journal, was in Klamath. Falls overnight for the state highway commission meeting. , Home Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tucker returned Wednesday night from a six-day trip to Washington. Langcll Valley St. Barnabas Guild is sponsoring a card party at the parish hall Saturday, Au gust 14. Representative Mabel R. Hanson will be Klamath County Oregon Education Association rep resentative at the sixth annual OEA Leadership Conference to be held on the University of Oregon campus August 15-11. Cliff Nelson Is new afternoon bartender at the Pow Wow lounge at the Winema Hotel. "Deke Sperling will continue as bar man ager from 4 p.m. to midnight. Evergreen and Juniper Gar den Clubs will meet at Joan's Kitchen Monday morning at 10:30, August 16. 'A demonstration of flower arranging will be given for all the 4-H flower club members. Club members bring materials for arrangements. Sack lunch with beverage furnished. Fire Prevention Trucks . of the T. P. Packing Company of Klamath Falls and those owned by other members of the Western stute. Meat Packers Association traveling highways In eight West ern states, will display forest fire prevention posters during the peak of the lorest lire season. Merrill John F. Reeves, tor nedoman's mate . second class, USN, of Merrill, participated in the largest training exercise con ducted by the Pacific Fleet units since the end of World War n. He Is serving aboard the suoma line USS Ronquil. Malln Boyd J. Irvine, elec tronics technician third class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl " M. Irvine of Malin, serving aboard the escort aircraft carrier USS Badoeng Strait, participated on July 31 in the annual Seattle Seafair." Special Service at Mare Is land Navy yard, Sunday, August 15, Is planned for men of the United States Navy who lost their lives in the tragic explosion and : lire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Bennington, last May 26. Grange Party Cards will be played at the Olene Community Hall. Saturday night, August 14 ft the hall to raise funds for im provements. Time will be 8 p.m, Shasta View . grange will meet at 9 a.m. Sunday, August 15 at Wiard Park between Hope and Wiard Streets for a ham 'n egg breakfast. All grange members and their families are urged to attend. Please take table service. Vacationing Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dixon and children, Mi chael and Mary are leavinc this weekend to spend a week at Ya chats. Mrs. Dixon is director of the Klamath County Red Cross, Meeting There will be a com mittee meeting of the.Al Ullman lor congress group in Prlneville. 9:30 a.m. Sunday, August 15. All committee members are urged to attend. Paul Buck, chairman of the Klamath County Democratic Central Committee, Mrs. Buck and about 15 others will attend from Klamath Falls. If in need of transportation call Mrs. Buck at 5647. Home Mr. and Mrs. Uel Dil lard and children. Dottle and Mona, Henley, have returned from a vacation trip to Yellowstone Park where an older daughter, Mary has been employed during the summer. Mary is a student at Oregon State College and received her opportunity to spend the sum mer in the park through the col lege. Dale of the quarterly meet ing of the Klamath County Po mona Grange at Midland Grange Hall will be held Saturday, Au gust 14 instead of August 4, date given in a previous news story. Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Mar ion Barnes, Olene, spent the last weekend witn Mr. ana iurs. Charles Card at Happy Camp, Cal ifornia. Mrs. and Mrs. Card, for mer owners of the Yukon Tavern and Cafe In Tulelake, now own and operate a trailer camp. The Barnes also visited Indian Creek and spent Sunday night with their daughter, Mrs. William Garriott and family, Dunsmulr. Visitors Visiting at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Von Berthelsdorf at Trail's End Ranch. Swan Lake are Mrs. Hugh Colapy, Akron, Ohio, the former Lydia Von Berthelsdorf and her sons, Danny, Michael and Richard and Mrs. Gertrude Gra ham, son Douglas and daughter Diane, Portland. This Is the first time the family has been together in eight years. Advancement Word was re, .iviri here bv Mrs. Harriet New man. 229 E. Main, that her son Cpl. Harold B. Rugg has been ad, vanced to sergeant. He is sta tioned in Korea with the 6th Med, leal Depot. Judge Gives Morals Case Sentence Russell Anderson, 36 - year - old Barley Processing Phases Discussed At Merrill Meet A barley school Thursday after noon and a meeting Thursday night at the Recreation Hall in Merrill was well attended by barley grow ers and handlers. Orme Kellet, representative of the Great Western Malting Com pany, Vancouver, explained to the group the different processing phases necessary from the time their grain Is received by the malt- construction worker, who police ste" until the finished product Is .. , ' rnrtv 1ri fl nruvrt v sprvpd as a nrocurer lor nisi--" - wife. Florence, who acted as prostitute, pleaded 'guilty late Thursday in circuit court to con tributing to the delinquency ol a minor. Circuit Judge Ralph M. Holman sentenced Anderson to nine months in the county jail. According to city police, they had Anderson and his wife under sur veillance for several months. They said they arrested Anderson after they caught Mrs. Anderson in bed with Carl Zumwalt, logging camp cook. They said Andersen's 12-year-old son was in the same room with them, i Zumwalt and Mrs. Anderson also were arrested on: charges of con tributing to the delinquency- of a minor. They were charged Jointly. Both-were freed after a writ of habeas corpus, was filed by Zum walt's attorney', U.S. Balentine. At a hearing on the writ before Circuit Judge David R. Vanden berg, Balentine was sustained hi his contention that the complaint filed against Zumwalt and Mrs. Anderson by the district attorney's office was defective. District Judge D. E. Van Vac tor, who ordered the couple held for the grand jury, appeared as a witness at the habeas corpus hear big. He said the district attorney's complaint was defective but that he had held Mrs. Anderson and Zumwalt because of the sordidness of the case. It was shown that the complaint failed to establish the fact that the crime occurred in Klamath Coun ty, a necessary element In all criminal actions. Judge Vandenberg recessed the hearing and Judge Van Vactor then went to his courtroom and issued an order setting aside his previous order holding Zumwalt and Mrs. Anderson for the grand jury. An derson also would have gone free at that time but he had waived preliminary hearing and was be ing held for the grand Jjury under a separate order. T'n Annfn hov r"s nn"i made a ward of the juvenile court. Stressing the importance of the new standards recently applied to the first three grades in mailing barley, Kellet asked.growers in this area to be especially careful about shipping injjured grain, naming spe- ciiicauy tnat nurt oy irost, neat or mold. Such seeds cannot be used for the making of malt and buyers will not purchase It for malt pur- Tulelake Grower Meeting Planned TULELAKE A meeting has been set for Monday. August 16, at 8 P.m. (DST1 at' the Tulelake Growers Association offices for the purpose of discussing the NoithernC allfornia ' Potato Mar ketlng Order as it will apply to seed growers. The meeting nas ncen caned oy Glen Arthur, chairman of the 20 man marketing order committee. All seed growers and interested commercial growers are urged to attend. .poses, he stated. Handlers should be extremely careful about shipping malt barley in dirty cars, Kellet warned, add ing that the malting and brewing industries are governed by pure food laws and It is within the power ot pure food inspectors to turn down carloads of dirty grain. Farmers were also warned asrainst mixing dry grain with some containing too high moisture con tent in order to meet the moisture grade of 13.5 per cent. Mixed grains of this type will not malt uniformly, Kellet added. Bert Whitlock, of the Portland USDA grain Inspection office rec ommended to farmers that they have their barley tested before sell ing so they would know what grade they have. Dr. D. D. Hill, head of the agron omy department at Oregon State College outlined work being done by the college on barley research. Two years ago several large grain companies turned over a sum of money to the college to be used in malting barley research. This work, while still in its in- National Forest Receipts Told PORTLAND Wl The value of timber cut in 18 national forests in Oregon and Washington was an nounced Thursday at $33,966,671 10 per. cent less than the previous year. - v . - J. Herbert Stone, regional fores ter, said the decrease reflected lower stumpage prices. The second highest cut tn the history of the forests 2,400,000,000 board ieet was reported for the year end ing June 30. ' Stone said grazing, land and power uses added $310,872 to net receipts for the Northwest region STORM PUNTA ARENAS. Chile Wl The port of this southernmost city of the western hemisphere was strewn with wreckage Friday as a result of a three-day winter storm. Ten small ' ships were blown high on the beach by frigid winds and the rough waves of the Strait of Magellan. Ft. Rock Teacher Injured By Fall ' FORT ROCK Mrs. Anne Sloan, teacher of the Fort Rock school met with an accident the afternoon of August 11 while she was preparing the schoolhouse for the coming school term. Her fall caused twa broken ribs. Mrs. Sloan must have been unconclous about two hours before the acci- dent was discovered by her young grandson, Ray, who came looking for her to get him ready for Bible school. Mrs. Howard McGee and Mrs. Andy Hergert took Mrs. Sloan to the St. Charles Hospital at Bend and they took Ray Oates home to his mother, Mrs. Bud Salisbury, at Crescent. LAWNS D you want food liwn r Jt a low price? Von can't ilwayi nava both. We do quality work and fur nish CTcrythinc Wo guarantee a food it and of grais! Phono 416. LAKESHORE GARDENS NURSERY Rhee Cheered On Return To Korea SEOUL Ifl President Syngman Rhee returned today and was met by cheering thousands after his 20- day visit to the united states where .he called for renewal of the Korean War. "The hearty welcome and synv nathv expressed by multitudes of tne American people everywnere were tar beyond my expectations, Rhee said in a prepared state ment. The President said he found re sponsible American officials, con gressmen and people "greatly sympathetic'! to Korea. fancy, has already indicated that desirable protein content can be at tained through the proper use of fertiliier. Extensive tests are be ing made on the use of nitrogen on barley ground, Hill stated. The present estimates on brew barley acreage in Oregon are com parable to last years acreage, ac cording to Ray Teal, marketing specialist af Oregon State College. Willamette Valley raised 161,000 acres and Klamath County 46,000 acres last year. There is some indication that brewing barley In the Midwest and parts of California has been dam aged by the drought and this could help to strengthen prices on prem- -tfau'j enfy. m ! wppy HOPS IN QUALITY!! IjlMITATIOHsfc? 1 1 HARP B-'IW j I LITTLE PQ0F LOW IN PRICE! DON'T BE FOOLED I Don't buy ony food plan until you investigate The Original and Genuine AMANA FOOD CLUB PLAN... BE SURE ... That tha prloa of Ilia Ireeier b correct k That yaa ara buylrtf locally! ir That you ar buylnr National Brand (you ara going to tlva wllta It a long iitnt.) Thai von will have a aourcc of iup ply whan you want to rc-ordcr loofl. it That yon hava a local aorvlro da partmcnt back af your purchaia. That you know who yon ara buy ing irom; AMANA The Freeier that outperforms ALL! MERIT'S 609 So. 6th So. Orrcon'l Oldett and Lirc.it AniDi De.ler and Food Plan Operator. lum malting barley. Teal stated. About 100 million bushels of malt type barley are used each year for human consumption and brew ing purposes. In discussing barley prices for this year's crop Teal said he could only quote prices at Minneapolis terminals as the first malting bar ley reached their August 8. No. 2 malt barley sold for 159.15 to $60.40 a ton. wniie tnis was malt type grain it was not Hannchen, Teal concluded. Carl Richardson of the U.S. Mar ket News Service spoko briefly on the formation of his organization which started furnishing crop re- tWWJ) ports to the publlo as early as 1915. Since tnat time additional crops were reported on each year until now all crops are Included la the Market News Service reports. 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