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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1955)
MONDAY, AUGUST 13. 1955 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THREE Voodlands Top All US Crop Figures Woods OCCUnV mnr farms in the United States than ny other crop. Commercial forest land in the U. S. amounts to 460 million acres. About 11J million o( this puouc lorest land and over 343 million acres of wood land Is in private ownership. Small woodlot holdings are owned by 3'i million farmer nrt 1 million non farm owners. These hoMings are generally accessible to uads and markets and they usuaiiy occupy better than aver age timber growing sites. They are supplying at least twn-thirris of the wood products used in America at the oresent time. The woodlots exert a marked in fluence on the extent and char acter of runoff and on the con servation of soil and water. Usual ly occupying the rougher and high er portion of farms, the woodlots can be the source of damaging floodwaters or they can be a source of valuable water supplies. A large number of small wood lots are in a rundown condition. Owners have let them be heav ily overcut; burned over and yuun? trees have been damaged or destroyed and the soil packed by overgrazing. With careful hand ling and good management the tmall woodlots could produce sev eral times what they do now. Small woodlots do not have the benefit of technical forestry as sistance that the public and lante industrial forests have. The De partment of Agriculture, the states and conservation minded- organiz ations are working in a number oi ways to increase aid in forestry matters for the small woodlots. Some of these organizations are ihc Extension Service; the Soil conservation service, and the West ern Pine Tree Growers Associa tion. Actors Guild Planning Vote HOLLYWOOD IW Members oi the AFL Screen Actors Guild vote tomorrow night on an agreement which is expected to end the 10 day nationwide strike aqainst pro ducers of television entertainment! films. The union's Board of Directors I approved a new contract proposal 1 yesterday and a spokesman said it represents "a good deal for dors and that It. is "fully ex pected they will vote approval." retails of the proposal will not be disclosed until the membership meeting tomorrow. If approval is Riven, work will resume on TV entertainment film Wednesday. Negotiations were between the EUi'd and the Alliance of Televi sion Film Producers and the As Hoctitton of Motion Picture Pro ducers. ' ' ' " John L. Dales, guild executive secretary, said the,; strike was called because of the "refusal of the producers of filmed television programs to agree to make any residual payment whatsoever to actors for the second run of a video film." Tibet Leader Asks Asylum TOKYO IIP The elder brother oi Tibet's Dalai Lama has fled his nation's Communist rule and been granted asylum by the U.S. Em bassy in Tokyo, it was learned today. An American spokesman said' "He has been in Tokyo about SO days and will be given a per manent visa to the United States by the end of this month." He Is Tagtscr Dcnprabche, a well-built slx-iooter and one oi his younger brother's close advisers. The Dalai Lama formerly was the politico-religious head of his nation. He lost ai least a oortlon of his eminence when the Chinese Communists conquered Tibet in 1951. The American spokesman said Tagtser, after he reaches the United States, "will be attached to an American university (still unnamed for research on Tibet in the fields of language, customs and culture. " SATISFACTION PROVED ... When it comes to excavat ing, qrading, trucking, or rood construction, come to us for o qood job at a sensi ble price. We're fully equipped and obly manned to move the earth. ' GRAHAM BROS. Herbert C. Grahom Phone 5541 Lakeport Blvd. NEWEST ADDITION to iiie Town and Country Shopping Center on South Sixth Street will be one of the largest food markets in Oregon, comparable to the finest on the West Coast. Oper ators of the new business will be Emit Albrecht of Emil's in Klamath Falls and Roy Stone of Spokane. Announcement of the Identification of . Yacht Club Picnic Pictures The two girls "tending the roast on the spit", Janie and Kathy Black, are daughters of Dr. and Mrs. Neil F. Black. Their dad and Larry Brown dug the pit, built the fire to barbecue the 100-plus pounds of prime rib roasts and in general were responsible for the main entree. Picture top center, from the left, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Hutchison, Mrs. Lee Sioner and Dr. Hugh M. Swaney. Top right, same order, Charlie Riley, with a Groucho Marx cigar, Mrs. Bert Schmidt, Bert Schmidt and Commodore Lewis Kandra. Lower left is a threesome from Portland, here as members of Judge Alger Fee's staff. At the left, John Beekwith, court clerk; Mrs, Hal Kenyon and Hal Kenyon, court clerk, who met some old and made a number of new friends at the 'picnic. In the group of five, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Timmons are seated in front of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Stuart, club members, and Steve Wolcken, from Oakland, who is a Rocky Point summer home owner. Two in picture, lower right, Mrs. C. M. (Tim I Liiberg and her sister, Clara Phelan. Mrs. Lizberg and her husband are in business in Medford and Clara Phelan recently moved there from San Francisco. The puppy had become somewhat pensive by the time the picture was taken and was too tired to smile. WT)'WERY schoolboy opening date will be made soon as arrangements are made for installation of the modern equipment designed for speeding up service to patrons is installed and the shelves stocked, The new market will be nanjed "Low Cost Market." Missing Scout MUSKEGON, Mich., ft A five weck search for missing Boy, Scout Peter Gorham has ended with the d 1 s c o v e r v of his bullet-pierced body. , The 12-year-old Evanston. III., boy was a victim of Michigan's third unsolved child slnylng in less then five months and, like the others, was believed to have been slain by a sex deviate. William Jannega, of Muskogon, who was looking over prospective sites 'for a new home, came aqross Peter's badly decomposed body yesterday in a desolate woodc 12 miles north of Muskegon. A srsall caliber bullet had penetrated ' his skull. The rccne was five miles from where he vanished July 5 on a scout hike. ! A state pathologist said the boy apparently had b?en dead since shortly after his disappearance. Siate Police Capt. Leroy R. HUnt said several persons, including one O Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive repeated dally, 79c Found Slain or more camp counsellors, will be questioned. The discovery broke weeks of tension for Peer s parents, Mr, and Mrs, Frederick A. Gorham. "At least the wait is over," Gorham commented stoically at the scene. A preliminary sweep of the woods, once a swamp area, re covered the youth's bedroll, under clothing, shojs and pajamas. His flashlight was foun.1 beneath the body, clothed only In bluejeans. Michigan's other two child slay' ing victims were little girls. . Barbara Gaca. 7. of Detroit, disappeared March 24. Her body was found March 31 on a trash dump near Pontlac. She had been benten, raped and strangled. The body of Jeannle Singleton, 8, of Kalamazoo, was found June 1, nine days after her abduction en route home from school. She died similarly to Barbara. MclNTYRE TRAVEL SERVICE Your Experianccd Aient W1LLARD HOTEL Phena 3081 Big Food Market To Go In At Town, Country Center Plans are moving forward ranid-i ly for expansion of the $1 million Town and County Shopping Center with completion of a new food mar ket and construction on three ad ditional buildings now under way which will accommodate 23 retail stores and offices. The announce ment of plans for the increase in floor space at the center was made this week by the management of the center. Opening in the near future, will be one of the largest food stores m the state of Oregon, "The Low Cost Market," to be operated by Emit Albrecht. Klamath Falls, manager of Emil's on Nonh Ninth and Pine streets, and Roy Stone of Spokane, who operated a grocery in Klamath Falls several years ago. The market will have a floor space of 190 by 100 feet with the latest type Interior and equipment for the comfort of customers. The building conforms to architecture of other buildings in the shopping center with wide covered porches. Construction has been started on three additional units which will give space for 23 retail stores and offices. Overall plans call for nine more buildings to be built in Ihc rear of the present frontage. In creased space is to be added to the building already occupied by the Roberts Hnrdware. When completed the shopping center will employ from 300 to 500 persons In an estimated 70 busi nesses. Approximately 125 will be on local payrolls by January 1, 1955. Parking distributed over three major parking lots will accommo date up to 5.000 cars per hour The center owns and operates its own black topping equipment. Fire protection has been provld ed, the entire area Is to be lighted with high candle-power lights and English Paper Shortage Eases LONDON I Britain's newspap ers hampered by newsprint shortages since World War II will be able to get ration-free sup plies within six months. The Board of Trade announced last night that rationing will be eased another notch next Sunday, permitting papers to add two to four pages. By next March the 15-yenr-old controls will be lifted completely, we board said. Thereafter, news print will be controlled only by the amount available and the papers' ability to pay for It. During the war most papers were limited to lour pages , dally. BIG Y BONUS OFFER CONTINUES I r- IYORY SNOW 1ST AQc n IVORY SOAP Medium Size Bars 3 25c CAMAY TOILET SOAP Reqular Size Bars 3 , 27c JOY Liquid Dctcrqcnt 17-oz. CO. Size J7l Additional co,iptf rHr&3 p:S:S Rib Steaks f.t 4710 i a child c.ire center is to be avail-: able for shopping parents. There will be a centrally locat ed communications office to all units, music is to be piped to ev ery building if tenents desire and the completed center will cater to family trade. The center will be located with in three blocks of the proposed new high school and Is near the new Twyla Ferguson Elementary School. Construction was started IS months aso and completion dale is set for 1957. Stores now opcraU tablets make reducing easy as AB C fat goes fast f ror Ml over the body , . . 1 mallow two .klt hrlitra 2 drink Urf tlMI ol wattr each meal NO COUNTING CALORIES This new discovery now helps you take o(T fat while you eat the foods you choose no dieting or hunger pains and no ill effects to your heart. Hunger Tablets are absolutely safe it's a food adjunct not a drug. For safe, healthful, easy inir . . . set Hunger mm TiVilfta tndav. Lell 19( a day you get a sixteen day supply. If that time you are not luuy satisfied wilh the results the full purchase price will be refunded to you. Toy Less Druq 808 Main Suburban Druq Co. 3950 So. 6th fJWl'l :J or mm Vw2n!--rnd HD Tissue I Strawberries Del Monte Grapefruit Juice 4 $1 Men's Lawn Handkerchiefs 10$1 Improved Fay Elbertas Peaches 1 o i Yakima Apricots Ground Beef Breaded Veal Cutiets ''" Tender, well trimmed .... - ir r'Sv"" v V- So. 6th ing. Include the Suburban Drvz Store, Rickys Jewelers, Roberts Hardware, Variety store and the, Shaffer Electric. . Cash and Carry SPECIAL! Unorranged 25 Gladiolus doz Suburban Flower Shop 3414 So. 6th Ph. 8188 0 :f than 'M' Jy in sold at leading drug stores McConkcy Drugs 635 Main ' Lee Hendricks Drugs 2212 So. 6th HE AT HER I - i 3 then t J cm the foods ia. & i ' ,ouiik. . rvL f n DINNER WARE WITH $5.00 PURCHASE ONCI YOU Sit THIS IOVHY MmiN TCHt'lL WANT NOT ONt, IUI 4 OC MOl COMPIITI PIACI 1ITTINOII THIS 1IMI POKCll AIM DINKIR WARI WILL HUD ILtOANCI TO YOUH TABU , . . AND Will 01 VI IVHT KCAl A PARTY All. OUR IKCtUllVt 01 HON It I A; ID UNDII-OLAII TO RITAIN ITI adetird Rrccrry and Ihrift Specials cttective through Wednesday 10 - $1 Stokclcy'i - Fresh A CI 10 431 20-22-lb. lug 2.29 20-lb. lug 1,69 - 29c 2 - 25c ib. t Phone 6875 mi r