Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 13, 1954, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    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.
He also stated that the estimate
on Canadian crops is to be released
today, and indications are that the
barley crop there will be down
about 12 per cent under last year.
MOTHER-
DURING AUGUST
YOU MAY HAVI A
BEAUTIFUL 5x7"
PORTRAIT
OF EACH
CHILD
NOT
OVER
12
YEARS
NO LIMIT!
STUDIO
704 MAIN PHONE 4526
MAMATH lAUi, OlIOON
TILLESTWi
SODA Frl
IN TOWN
.fa
f
I
SUPER
CREAMED
ICE CREAM
1130 MAIN ST.
Open 11 till 10:30
mm
ORE OF TOMORROW'S ADVANTAGES TODAY
IN A fJEU
IPS!
"Better
. buy
Blih!
OK60N'SOm
BEST BUY SALE!
America's Finest
30-inch Range
FHIGIDAIRE Thrifty-30
Electric Range
e Big range performance
In email space
e Appliance Outlet
e Evan-Htat Oven
High-cpeed Broiler,
waist-high
Full-width Storage
Drawer
e Oven Signal light
e Lifetime Porcelain Finish
Iniide and Out
Model RT-30
$9093
Caaking-Toa lamp with Caalt
Mairtr Ovtn Caritrtt Available- At
Slight Intra Call
Built and Backed by General Motors
VERN OWENS'
1 ( Y
r LJIiA
0
AND
GET A CAR THAT HILL
ITS TRADE-IN VALUE
HOLD ONTO
TOO!
A V-8 ENGINE
. . the only V-8 in
the low-price field!
BALL-JOINT SUSPENSION
. the greatest riding
and handling' 'did In 20 years!
of!
wm-imm srras
, . . that will keep your Ford
young for the years ahead!
TRADEWORTHY VALUE
. . . that makes Ford bring you
more when you sell or trade it!
THERE'LL NEVER BE A BETTER TIME THAU NOW
TO GET A GREAT DEAL IN A FORD
BALSIGER MOTOR CO.
Main at Esplanade , Phone 3121
Cascade Home Furnishings
H1TI WEINHAKD CO.'fOITUMO, OIE.
-YOU CAN BE SURE WITH.AN.7USED. CAR FROM YOUR FORD DEALER-
124 No. 4th
n. S3iS