SUNDAY, AUGUST 21, lass
PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Migratory Bird
Rights Told
Migratory birds make some long
and ttrange flights between their
summer and winter homes, accord
ing to Chet Kebbe, cruel of fur
bearers and waterfowl, Oregon
Game Commission. Band returns
have shown that in some instances
these flights have entailed dis
tances of 6,000 miles or more.
Of special interest to Oregon
hunters are the several thousand
waterfowl banded each year at the
management areas of the Oregon
Game Commission. 1
Of the many band returns by
hunters, several of these birds were
long range travelers who preferred
the Mexican climate in which to
spend the winters.
A male pintail banded at Sum
mer Lake in August of 1053 was
taken by a hunter in February 195S
at Maramoros, Mexico located on
the Oulf of Mexico, a distance of
some 2.000 miles from the point of
banding.
Another long range tourist was
a cinnamon leal also banded at
Summer Lake in August of 1953
who preferred lower California for
Its wintering home. The Bird was
shot In February of 1055 at Hardy
River, Mexican, Baja California,
about 1,200 miles from Bummer
Lake.
The long range flyer, however,
was coot. Banded at Summer
Lake In August of 1054, the bird
was shot near Amcca, Jalisco,
Mexico, which is south of Mexico
City, a flight of close to 2,500.
Of special Interest was the flight
of an eastern species of waterfowl,
rarely found west of the Rocky
Mountains. A black duck, common
from the eastern seaboard to the
Mississippi River, decided to take
a cross-country flight of some 1,700
miles ' and wound up in Oregon.
Banded as a Juvenile female at
Orland Park, Illinois In August
1944, this black duck was trapped
and released by game commission
personnel at Umatilla meadows,
Hermlston, Oregon in February of
1955.
Maybe this 11-year-old bird de
cided to see the world before she
retired from the active duty list.
L -i a ,P T EI
r Ml i
7 I
THIS HUGE STEER was recently purchased from Basil Hall, Bly, by R. E. Rhodes, auctioneer
at the Klemath Livestock Commission Company. The four year old steer weighs 1,960 pounds
and dwarfs the two year old cow standing beside it. The cow tips the scales at 740 pounds.
The steer is consuming about 20 pounds of grain a day and all the hay he wants. Rhodes said
that plans for the steer are indefinite at present.
Umpqua Falls
Fishway Built
teelhead and salmon will find
the South Umpqua Falls mighty
eaay this, fall and winter if all
stoes well on the fishway now un
der construction,
According to Oeorge Kernan,
chief engineer, Oregon Oame Com
mission, low water Hows have fav
- ored construction and the Telle
Construction Company of Portland,
contractors on the Job, rmve been
progressing well ahead of schedule.
All excavation and forms for
the concrete fish ladder have been
completed wltli the reinforcement
steel now being Installed. The first
concrete will be poured within the
week. Construction of the ladder
will be completed before high wa
ter this fall.
South Umpqua Falls has long
been a stumbling block for mi
grating fish. Only at certain stages
of water flow were steelhead, sal
mon, and other fish able to pass.
During extreme low flows all fish
were forced to remain below the
falls, seriously reducing the num
ber which were able to spawn suc
cessfully. The new ladder will al
low passage at all stages of water
flow, enabling fish to reach the vast
pawning reaches to the headwaters.
Russian Farmers Get Taste
Of Night Life in Hollywood
LOS ANGELES lUPl A sight
seeing tour of movioland that end
ed in the wee hours of this morn
ing apparently failed to faze the
tourim Russian farmers ioday and
they bounced up with only five
hours sleep to Ret an eaiiv start
for a look at the dairy Industry
here.
In the last day bf a rigorous
32-day schedule that has carried
them across the nation, they Joked
and were in good spirits as they
breakfasted, at 7 a.m. after get
ting to bed at 2 o'clock this morn-
Ins at the end of a "sneak" sight.
MARVIN R. STUMP, son of
Mr. and Mrs. A. R, Stump,
2116 Warring Street, is cur
rently enrolled in basic mili
tary training with the United
States Air Force at Parks
AFB, California. Stump, who
attended KUHS, entered the
service on July 8.
Scout Jamboree
Opens In Canada
NIAOARA-ON- THE- Lake. Out.
UP) Canada'a Governor Oencral
Vincent Massey today formally
opened the eighth world Boy Scout
Jamboree, which actually got un
derway Inst night with a scries
of campflre sings.
The wall of bagpipes, the whis
per of harmonicas and the dreamy
melody of accordions floated
through the encampment last night
as boys from B0 nations entertained
themselves in traditional camp
fashion.
Massey, chief scout of Canada,
took the salute at a march past
by the 10,800 boys who will spend
. week in the encampment.
President Elsenhower sent on
opening-day message saying the
scouts could build between them
selves a bridge of understanding
In world affairs which eannot be
built by governments alone.
A messoge was also received
from Pope Plus XII calling on
Roman Catholic Scouts to he "ar
tisans of peace" and "true dis
ciples ol the master of the beati
tudes." ,
Abbott Case
Tips Reported
BERKELEY (UP Attorneys
lor suspect Burton vv. Abbott have
presented Berkeley police with
what may be "a very hot tip" on
a new suspect In tne Stephanie
Bryan kidnap-murder case.
It was the first time Abbott's
attorneys have gone so far as to
Identify a second suspect who may
have killed the 14-year-old school
girl. It was also the first time they
have sought the aid of the Berke
ley police, who are trying to per
fect a circumstantial case against
the 27-year-old Abbott.
"The individual we named has
to be located and questioned be
lore the name can be revealed,"
attorney Stanley Whitney said.
Police Chief John Mostrom ad
mitted the new tip gave authori
ties an "investigative lead" but
made no further comment.
Meanwhile millrn nlen h-ntioM an
unldentiticd woman who chinned!
she sow Stephanie a short lime
atlcr she disappeared on April 28.
Hie woman, a maid in Berkeley's
Clarcmont section, wrote an anon
ymous letter to a San Francisco
newspaper slating she saw the
victim alter 4 p.m. on the day she
vanished.
The woman did not give her
name because she said her em
ployers did not want to become In
volved In the case and "they did
not wish their help to be either."
Naturopaths
Ask License
L08 ANGELES CUP) Some
3500 California doctors of Natur
opathy, barred from practicing the
healing art since t!H, todiw
sought restoration of their llrense
status through a sub-coinmlitea of
the Assembly Interim Committee
on Publlo Health.
Legal action was stalled yester
day at a hearing In the state
buildin-j when Attorney Norman
MacBeth, representing the Natur
opaths, called upon members ol
the profession In support of their
treatment are In demand by many
patients.
It was pointed out by I)r John
Wilson Gregory, holder of Ph. I)
degrees In psychology and natur
opathy from a London I'mverMiv.
that he received notable reeocni
tlon for his work s a specialist In
paraplegic cases for the Armv and
Air Force In World War II and now
he Is forbidden to practice in
California.
The naturopaths are seeking
either their own state examining
board or special ponrl to he set
up by the medlrsl examining
board, MacUelh said.
Nixon May Visit
Middle East Area
W ASHINGTON i.n Vice Presi
dent Nixon reportedly plans to tour
the Middle East later this year,
hoping to promote greater stability
in an area troubled by Arab-Jewish
conflict.
Though Nixon declined comment.
It was learned Friday the good will i
trip Is In tho planning stoge and I
mav begin in nbcut three months. I
Present plans were said to call i
for visits to Arab countries and
the Jewish stale of Israel.
Nixon and Secretary of State'
Dulles conferred for more than an
lUUir FridiiV. It ub iinHArutnn,l
part or the meeting was devoted
to the projected trip.
Aerinf Fish
Plant Slated
Approximately 350 high lakes of
the Cascade mountains will be
planted by aerial lilt this year in
game commission operations, ac
cording to Bob Borovicka, fishery
biologist, Oregon Game Commis
sion. Aerial lifts are now under way
from the Fail River Hatchery
wnere approximately 500,000 east
crn brook and rainbow trout are
scheduled for planting in the lake
basin groups of the central Cas
cade area.
Later this week fish will be plant
ed in the south Cascade lakes from
the Klamath hatchery. Flying oper
ations will be based at the air
field near Klamath Agency. Mount
Hood forest lakes will receive their
allocations later in the month from
the Hood River Hatchery near Dee.
Operations will stem from the Hood
River airstrip.
A Piper Super Cub will be used
for all flying operations. The Cub
is fitted with three 15-gallon belly
compartments which hold the fish
and water. Flying over a lake at
200 to 250 feet, the compartments
are opened allowing the fish and
water to float down like "rain
drops." The 200 to 250-foot drop
has no detrimental effect upon the
small fingerling trout.
One-fourth to one-half pound of
fish are carried per gallon of wa
ter, depending on the size of the
fish. If fry are being planted, one
pound of fish per gallon of water Is
usually carried.
The amount, size, and kind of
fish to be planted in each lake is
determined by data collected each
year by survey crews working the
high lake basins. Such data as ftsh
populations, size, growth rates, de-Kt-oe
of maturity, spawning facili
ties, and food conditions are col
lected by the survey crews to be
used as a basis for future alloca
tions. Aerial .stocking of the high lakes
by the game commission has in
creased each year since its inno
vation in 1947 when 35 lakes were
planted by the aerial lift method.
Todny, stocking by plane has re
placed the slow pack string oper
ations of yesteryears except where
it is impossible or too dangerous
to fly.
Approximately three-quarter mil
lion trout will be planted in 1955
by the aerial operations.
seeing tour by bus last night from
one end of Los Angeles to the
othe;-.
At 8 a.m. they were underway
on the last leg of their inspection
tour, to the hune nearby dairy
farm ot County Supervisor Roger
Jcs;;up.
Ihe siurdy visitors tried to dodge
the prcs last niyht after a late
dinner, explaining they were dog
tired. Then they sneaked into their
Air-conditioned bus and "did the
town."
They drove out Wilshire Blvd.. to
Santa Monica, 18 miles of neon
lighted store fronts and business
establishments. The distance
caused one of the farm lceders to
comment, "When does this street
end?"
When they trudtied through the
sands of the Santa Monica beach
for a close up of the booming
Pacific surf, Andrei Stepanovich,
a 44-year-old legal adviser to the
Soviet Ministry of Agriculture,
proved himself the opportunist of
the group, He wore his swimming
trunks under his trousers and
when the group stopped on the
ocean shore, he doffed his pants
and went for a swim in the
breakers.
The bus brought them back
downtown via Sunset Blvd., the
"niteclub strip." and they stopped
off at famed Grauman's Chinese
Theater in the heart of Hollywood
for an lnsp2ctlon of the footprints
and handprints of the stars imbed
ded In the concrete walk.
"Too big to take in in one night.
was the general comment about
sprawling Los Angeles.
La Grande
Plane Crash
Kills Pilot
LA GRANDE, Ore. A pri
vate plane crashed near a ranch
east of here Friday evening, kill
ing the pilot and injuring his two
passengers.
Tne pilot, Norman Kemp, 28.
Portland, died from head injuries
rbout two hours alter the cra:.h.
.iii co r p-niono. Dean Cooper,
-;, r;: . lie ;:y McGuire.
ai)oii! 45, alo ot .'oi'iland, v;ere
Uown to a La Grande hospiizl Sat
urday for treatment of Injuries.
Cooper suffered a directed
shouli-cr and cuts, tr.d jicLtirc
suffered a lut S3.'.;-. c;..j --'on,
a broken back, and rib and pelvis
injuries.
The crash occurred shortly be
fore 5 p. m. Ihe plane appa.emiy
oversdoi a small landing strip a.
Red's horse ranch on t.ie Lpper
Minam River, and when Kemp at
tempted to Uiln ailLuae, the trait,
a Piper 115, stalled and plummeteu
into a marsh about a mile from
ihe ranch buildings.
Word of the tragedy was relayed
to Dr. W. M. Peare of the Oregon
State Board of Aeronautics here.
and threo plane3 were dispatchea
to bring out the Injured men. Tne
planes were piloted by State Pa
trol Sgi. D. G. Casdato, who was
accompanied by Wallowa County
Coroner Norman Daniels, and El
don Down and Virgil Conlcy, pri
vate Uiers.
Kemp's body and the two In
jured m:n were placed in tne
planes, t"t It was considered in-
udvirable to try to fly them to La
Grande Friday night.
"Red" Higgins, who operates the
horse ranch, said the three men
had Dlanned a Ilshing trip on the
Minam River, He said he told the
men two weeks ago not to attempt
I to land at the ranch, but to put
down at La Grande and be Uown
here by an experienced pilot.
j Cooper said he tried to persuade
I Kemp to land at La Grande, but
I the pilot believed he could reach
i the ranch oelore evening. Higgins
said local pilots never try to land
at the ranch except in the early
morning or after 5 p. m.
Kemp was a partner In the Kemp
& Throndsen Wallboara Co., ol
Portland, and McGuire Is an em
ploye. Cooper is an employe of
Kaiser co.
17 .
THE RAINBOWS CAME BIG in 1914 when Glen M. Fountain, left, and hit fi thing partner. Ray
Bryant, fished the Williamson River for two hours and caugnr ,n,s .r.nS "'ft""'" p""."!1
Weight of th. fish ranged from six to 22 pound,. The picture was taken a Ch,loqu,n Fountain,
or Mercea vwum 7,
atf
born and raised in Klamath County is now supervisor
' Cry To Myself All The
Time,1 Rioter's Mother Says
City Plans
Foreclosures
PENDLETON tfl The city of
Pendleton will begin foreclosure
proceedings at noon Wednesday on
71 lots and properties in the Mon
tee addition unless water line as
sessment payments are met in full
by that time.
The City Council notified con
tractor William Brenner and the
project flnancers, Page Mortgage
Co. of Portland, of the action.
The city has held liens of $466
per lot for water line assessments
in the Montee addition.
Last February, the city created
a water Improvement district for
the area and made the assess
ments to pay for Us Investment
in construction of the water line.
Cost for the construction of the
line was about S54.000. with the
city's share about $21,000.
At that time the city had agreed
to handle temporary financing In
return for the liens against houses
and property in the addition.
The Hens were filed Feb. 3, pay
able within 30 d..ys.
At that time, Ihe contractor,
Brenner, estimated that the 71
houses would be completed within
six months. Only nine houses in the
project had been occupied by late
July.
Over The
Garden Gate
ALTIUAS GARDEN CLl'B
Mrs. Paul Decker entertained
members of the Alturas Garden
Club on August 11. Mrs. Decker,
vice president, presided in the ab
sence of the president, Mrs. Guy
Young, who is spending some time
at her summer home at Lake
Tahoe.
Several members of the club in
cluding Mrs. Decker, Mrs. X. Can
trail and Mrs. Ralph Laird attend
ed the Five-Club Flower Show in
Klamath Falls on August 10. Each
member reported the benefits de
rived from the show.
During the program at her
home, Mrs. Decker demonstrated
corsage making.
The next important event to
claim the attention of members of
the Alturas Club, will be the in
stallation of the "Flower Booth,"
at the Modoc County Fair at Ce-
dervllle.' The club plans an unus
ual display.
Mrs. Laird reported having met
with the city council in regard to
taking part In the national, state
and local "Lltterbug" campaign.
The council members were very
cooperative and offered aid in car
rying on tho campaign in the near
future. Mrs. jacK cnase, conserva
tion chairman of the club will
head the program for the coming
year.
The September meeting will fea
ture a garden tour of the Alturas
gardens. The tour will be open to
the nubile.
The attendance prize at the last
meeting was won by a guest, Mrs
Lynn Laird of Millbrae.
The hostess served refresh
ments.
Flood States To
Get Federal Aid
FRASER, Colo, if, President
Eisenhower Saturday designated
Foulh Ca i oil ua . Connecticut and
Pennsylvania regions hit by hur
ricanes and floods as major disas
ter areas eligible for federal aid.
The President's vacation head
quarters here also announced that
a request for aid has been received
from Rhode Island, and that the
request probably would be acted
on later in Ihe dav.
In the case of Sotilh Carolina,
Connecticut and Pennsylvania, no
federal money was made available
Immediately The amount to be
provided will drend on (he outcome-
of dam.tue aurvrva brtiiL-
made. I
Civic Players
Plan Production
LAKEVIEW The Madhouse
Players, ltxal civic theater group,
are rehenrsing on their next pro
duction, "Murder Has Been Ar
ranged" by Emlyn Williams which
will be produced for the public
at the Lakcview High School audi
torium on September a and 9 at
6 p.m.
Carl OIIMand Is directing the
plav, assisted by Mis. Virginia
Wilkerson. Cast members include
Charlene Burns, William Ayres,
Mrs. Jack Manges, Bob Burnett.
Mrs. Lola Janes; Mis. Juamta
Full; Charles Stillwcll; Hal An
derson and Lyda Hilti.
OBITUARIES
TITI'IR
Vivian Tiippr, 45, native and liO
Irm rfirtnl if Klamaih i'(iumv died
li'H AuU I. liiAA sn i aurvtvrd
v a n'n. Hruca TufPr ft ratlv,
Orfin Funeral irruirmnti u)
aniimincti by Wards Mamath Tuneral
Mom.
Hon.rr r.ur Mpr. 7. rfi(int M
Klamath Van for .'0 i-n dird here
Aumit la. IMSV He t iurvived bv a
iiMer, Mr. Mlla Co ot Waverlv. lilt
mn and a brother. Ira of AU-hinn.
Knit Mr. Matprt wat a HO member
of Klamath Loone N,v 77 a I. A A M.
runerat artar.cmnta ni be an-t-onnred
by Ward a Klamath funeral
Home.
No Agreement
Yet At Geneva
GENEVA '.A U.S. and Red
Chinese representatives adjourned
their meeting again Saturday with
out reaching agreement on the re
mit nation of 41 Americans de
tained tn Red China.
It was the ninth meeting between
U.S. Ambassador U. Alexis John
son and the Red Chinese envoy,
Wanpr Ping-nan.
A brief announcement after the
session disclosed only that the two
delegations were still bogged down
on the first agenda item concern
ing' the return of civilians of both
sides to their respective countries.
Not until some agreement is
reached on this point can the am
bassadors proceed to the discus
sion of the second Item "other
practical matters at Issue between
the two sides.'
The next meeting wai set for
Tuesday.
Ukiah Woman
Killed In Crash
PENnLFTON l Stale polir
Saturday reported Umatilla Coun
ty's 15th traffic fatality of the
year.
The latest victim was Mrs. Mar
garet Ruth WesKsnd. 3J. Ualah.
She dl;d tn a hospital here from
ln.uirtes suffered when she fell out
nf a car driven by her husband,
Olaf. in Vsiah.
Cub Scouts Get
Awards At Picnic
Cub Seout Pack No. 4 held Its
annual picnic at Wiard Park on
Wednesday evening, August 10,
A short business meeting was
held and the following awards
I wnc given, tfimimc bwiitm, mu.i
award, gold arrow and two silver
arrows: Steven Lawrence, wou
award, denner stripes: Don Plow
man, wolf award, gold arrow, two
silver arrows, assistant denner
stripe; Terry Eccles, wolf award.
William Miller, gold arrow wolf:
James Nelson, silver arrow wolf,
bear award, gold arrow bear; Ron
ald Melhase, silver arrow wolf;
Charles Oalloway, three silver ar
rows won, assistant denner stripe;
John Tinker, two stiver arrows
wolf; John Rings, two silver ar
ros wolf; Jimmy Beene, silver ar
row won.
Jerry Blankenship, silver arrow
wolf, bticksklnner; Joe Matllck
two silver arrows bear; Alan Ken
yon, sliver arrow bear; Don Asch
enbach, three silver arrows bear.
Walter AmbrogetU, two sliver
arrows bear, lion award, gold ar
row lion, two silver arrows lion;
Kenneth Ellis, gold arrow Hon, Sil
ver arrow lion; Marc Bennett, sil
ver arrow lion; Kenneth Calloway,
three silver arrows Hon; Billy
Oooatns, denner stripes; Charles
Costanio, assistant denner stripe;
Terry Christiansen, buckskinner;
Leo Jocks, two silver arrows wolf;
Frank Baltozar, gold arrow wolf;
Larry Blankenship, silver arrow
wolf.
The meeting was brought w a
close by Den No. 3.
EVERETT ifi To the public,
the names of inmates who parti
cipate in a prison riot or rebellion
may seem like a cold statistical
report from behind the grim walls.
To families of those involved, it
can be as closely personal as a
brother, a father, or a son.
The listing of Richard Hein. 21,
as one of the eight participants in
last Sunday's short-lived seizure of
hostages brought anguish to a Sno
homish County home and shocked
surprise to many who had given
support to a defense committee for
the boy who was convicted of hav
ing committed a murder at. the
aue of 14.
"I thought I was shockproof un
til .fete horaunul ' caiH Mr. .lnhn '
Hein, the mother. "Now I don't
know what to think. I cry to my
self from the time I'm off the job
unlil I return to work the next
morning."
Two attorneys have served In
succession in the Hein case, with
out charge, in the belief that the
boy was innocent of the knife and
club slaying of a 69-year-old man
In his home at Hartford In 1947.
Some residents of the area con
tributed to the Richard Hein De
fense Committee to pay the other
costs of the defense and court ap
peals. Mrs. Hein sa'd a letter this week
from her son included a complaint
about "taking the beef eight years
ago for something I didn't do."
"I'm afraid his faith ran out and
he Just lost control," the dis
traught mother commented.
The prison uprising came while
Hein's attorney, Paul Stocker of
Everett, was preparing the case
for possible review by the State
Board of Prison Terms and Pa
roles. He said he had held hope for
setting vounv Hein out of prison
next year. Stocker took over the j
case after Hein's original attorney
died.
Hein was a high school freshman
at the time he was charged with
first degree murder and convicted
largely on circumstantial evidence.
The main evidence against the
schoolboy defendant was a pen
ciled "confession" In his wallet.
The boy insisted It was only the
product of his imagination, written
after the elderly man's body was
found. The boy had been arrested
after schoolmates reported that he
had boasted of knowledge about
the killing.
Tule Girl To
Take Training
TULELAKE
Irene Barr, a
. ........ ,.. .... ent to graduate of the Tulelake High
the "taw prison and kept segre- School left August 20 of Oakland,
gated in a hut inside the walls at California where she has been at
Walla Walla until he was 10. !cepted by the Kaiser Foundation
Now his quarters are changed j Scn00l 0f Nursing for nurse's train
radically. Warden Lawrence Del- L ghe wm rep0rt to the school
more Jr said he is among the -,,. n.
I rebellious Inmates being held un- , K .
der maximum security res,rlc-1 da'tion. attached to the Permaneme
Uons- Hospital In Oakland will be con-
Delmore described Hein's prison cul(ie(j m inree years when she
record as "rather spotty." j wUj oe capPed as an R.N.
Dr. iNorman s. nY- Durln(I ner high school
has been quite a prooiem to tne
penitentiary staff for some time
He said, however, that he still can
iwork toward a parole.
years
:he was active in extra-curricular
activities including , athletics.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J. R. Barr, Tulelake.
Bonanza Park
Board Meets
BONANZA A discussion on
what trees shall be planted at
Bonanza Big Springs park was
held at the August 17 meeting
of the Bonanza Park Association.
The group has invited Floyd
Scott, of the Scott Nurseries . in
Klamath Falls, to be present at
the next meeting to help plan the
tree planting for the park.
The secretary announced that it
is time to pay dues.
Plans are being formulated for
a food sale to be held In Septem
ber. Margaret Burnett and Cora
Leavitt will be In charge.
The next meeting of the associa
tion will be held September 19 at
the Bonanza library.
DeLAP JOINS AF
Gene R. DeLap, 17, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Loyd DeLap. 3618 Alta
mont Drive. Klamath Falls, enlist
ed in the US Air Force August 16
for a four-year period, according
to Information received from T-Sgt.
Don Adams, local USAF recruiter.
DeLap had been a student at
KUHS. He will receive his ll
week baste training at Parks
AFB, California, prior to assign
ment for technical training.
FOR SALE
Fine) Dairy Type Heifers
Freahea 8oen,
lorae Freak Now.
Drews Hereford Ranch
Phene IsU
5 AIOVT A
ft VACATION LOAN
m
m fmt KKhMMtl at sttaiiet
2 ...MWKtiaWiwn
2 Hill X mn rm h.
x ff wmm mtmj...ncxm mar, Ml
il jam
PACIFIC
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j L A. Woodard, Mgr.
fi Phont 8128
121 So. 9th St.
pip
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