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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1955)
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18. 1855 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE NINE Timber Cut, Growth Said Close To Balance In U.S. PORTLAND Ifl Timber growth end timber cut right now are close . 10 balance in the United Sutes, Richard E. McAidle reported here to the nation's foresters, but ha added there is a grave question for tne future. Speaking at the 55th annual meet ing of the Society of American For esters Monday, McArdle, chlei of the U. S. Forest Service, listed this as one of 21 highlights of the 1995 timber resources review, the first national survey of timber in 10 years. McArdle told th: delegates th-. while there Is no immediate threat j of a timber 'shortage, the next two Cool Bandit Robs Bank PORTLAND W A man with a mustache, a pistol and a robbery note got $3,285 from a bank teller at mid-afternoon Monday. He melt . ed into the sidewalk crowd and Tuesday was still at large. Joseph F. Santoiana. FBI agent ; in charge, said a number of clues were being checked but there was nothing definite to report. Amon- the clues was a report that a Cadillac with Michigan li cense plates was seen driving past the bank, the Metropolitan Branch of the U. S. National, several times before the robbery. It held two men, one apparently answer ing the robber's description, her and shoved over a note which Mrs. Barton Learned was the teller before whom the robber ap peared. He pointed a small revolver at her and shoved over a note which read: "Give me all $5s (10s 20s S50s. Be quick and be quite and no on will be hurt." Mrs. Learned told police she handed the man a stack of $1, 5, and $10 bills. He turned away and walked out of the bank, located In the Public Service Building. Mrs. Learned described the man as about S-foot-S, weighing about 143, with a black mustache, horn rim glasses, black, uncombed hair and a swarthy skin. She said he wore a brown suede jacket. It was Portland's first bank rob bery in a little more than two years. A gumman held up the Hollywood Branch of the First Na tional Bank Oct. 3. 1093, and got away with $1,200. He was caught six months later. decades will determine whether this country can meet its timber needs in the future. He said that more timber will have to be planted and that small timber owners will have to Im prove management it there is to be sufficient lumber for a nation cf 1-75 million by the year 2000. The nation's chief forester said that 60 per cent of the forest lands of the United States are in the hands of small landowners and thai, management of these lands had lagged behind that of large tracts of public and private timber. It is the small owner who must learn to grow more timber and manage It well, he said. McArdle also reported that the quality of timber was declining and tnai mmoer sues were decreasing as less and less virgin timber re mained to be cut. The decline in quality, he said. was relatively unimportant be cause of advances in, wood technol ogy. other highlights of the timber resource review as reported by McArdle Two-thirds of the sawtimber vol ume is in the West but three fourths of the timber growing lands are in the East. Approximately 115 million acres of land should be planted in trees or should have their timber pro duction capacity improved. insects and disease kill more timber than fire. The great need in the timber industry is tor insect and disease control since great progress has been made in fire prevention and control. The poorest record in timber management occurs in small farm holdings in the South. The amount of limber-growing land lias been decreasing gradu ally and this trend ought to be topped. The convention continued here Tuesday wiih a number of tech nical reports. KFLW To Air Coronation MERRILL Station KFLW will present a live broadcast of the coronation of Queen Lou Ann Kan dra and presentation of her court, and other banquet proceedings from tne Merrill High School gym nasium, Friday, October 21. Charlie McFarlan will broadcast the coro nation. The coronation will start prompt ly at 7 p.m. and the broadcast will continue until 7:55 p.m. Queen Lou Ann. will preside over the Klamath Basin Potato Festival and will receive her crown and royal velvet robes from Jim Short, Redmond, rancher and Oregon state director of agriculture. The crown will be relinquished by Mary Johnson, last year's queen. The queen will be preceded up the length of the aisle by mem bers of her court. Judy Main, Tulelake; Darleen Daniels, Mer rill; Sonya DeGrande, Henley and Claudette Shuck, Bonanza. Flower girls will be small Susan Hasklns and Marleen Moore. Guests at the banquet are urged to be In their seats before the royal procession starts. Both turkey and fish are on the menu, prepared and served by women of the Merrill Presbyter ian cnurcn. The Rev. George Milne, pastor of the Merrill Presbyterian Church, will emcee the banquet program. which will include several musical numbers. Relative Law Repeal Sought PORTLAND Wl Repeal of the Oregon relative responsibility law Will be sought by the Oregon In stitute of Social Welfare. The organization, holding its an nual meeting here, also proposed in a weekend meeting that the minimum state old age assistance payment be $100. A congressional bill to pay $100 pensions to men at r and women (t 62 was endorsed. Floyd Dover was reelected presi dent. Mexico Fights Pacific Floods MEXICO CITY (PV Mexico. Just recovering from disastrous floods and hurricanes on the East Coast. Tuesday battled high water in five s'stes along the Pacific. Sixty persons were reported missing In Atenqulque, a paper manufacturing town in Jalisco state that was digging itself out of an avalanche ol mud, rocks and trees. A big kraf. paper mill, only one in Mexico, was heavily dam aged. Homes of 50 workers also were destroyed. The mill manager said he saw bodies of victims floating down the Los Maws, and Tuxpan rivers, which went on rampage after three days of rain. Some parts ol the town, about 300 miles west o( Mexico City, were under nine feet of mud. Beside Jalisco, other West Coast rtates stricken by the floods were Collma. Nayarit. Guerrero, and Michoacan. wasned - out oriages. railroads, and other communica tions isolated Colima from the rest of the cjuntry. Logger Asks Pre-Hearing Orville N. Gillam, 91-year-old logger, accused of robbery by force and violence, demanded a preliminary hearing when he was arraigned late Monday before Act ing District Judge George Proctor, Gillam was arrested by city po lice after an alleged "mugging" on North Sixth Street in . which William C. Laahs, 315 Jefferson Street, Was beaten when he refused- to surrender his wallet. When Laahs' shouts for help brought several persons to the scene, Olllam fled. He was cap tured by Oordon Smith of the Marlon Apartments, The holdup try was staged In front of the apartment house. Judge Proctor set a hearing In the case for 10 a.m. next Thurs day. Gillam Is held In the county jail in lieu of $3,000 ball. John H. Potter Funeral Planned Funeral services for John H. Potter, 73, resident of Seattle, will take place from Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Wednesday, October It at 3 p.m. with the Rev. Dewaln Arnold of Tulelake Church of Christ officiating. Interment will be in Mt. Laki Cemetery, Mr. Potter died Sunday at the home of a sister Mrs. Mollis Bur gess, 72 North Ninth Street. He has been ( farrar for many years prior to his Mtlrement several years ago. Hungarian Soccer Player Vanishes VIENNA.. Austria ifi A Hun garian soccer team left Vienna Monday night for home short one of its leading players. Vienna police said that despite a search, Hungarian soccer offi cials were unable to !ind any trace of Gyula Csernal, a member of the Vasas-Czepel Club. He helped his side sco'e a S-2 victory over Aus tria's "B" team in Vienna Sun dav. Police apeculaled that Csernal had broken with his country's Communist government. MILTON CLUB FORMED WASHINGTON A Milton Ei senhower club has been formed her to build up support for the President's brother as a candi date for the GOP presidential nom ination. Dr. Harold M. Dudley, executive secretary of the Greater Washington Industrial Council and nne of the club's organizers, said it was formed without the knowl edge of the President or his brother. IN 20 MINUTES -$.... NEW MINIATURE S0N0T0NE- and KNOW how much your taring cm b htlpd Ci-miw m ' 9f thw imn i Blurt MMtrrpitrtl Matt taautiful hn iftf and yrmi rrr ittrf y ot n th tht hmt hfarmt ftfreli vittm sTBotrt how to fiv. Alas. Mv M aerurtt oeiiwiwtwe ttwt t rur tMtrtfif, Hettl ! I "PaaaeoM Hterinf Canter WImhw on l i-m M a ak M'Hlrt, Ort. 1-M vmtf mMftltn free book. Frai Fla -. Pimm rraatt a Fan enveM kaanaf tnt for mt. - Name - J AMmm . . ... - Scott Raps Power Policy . WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. W. Kerr Scott said last night the ad ministration's power policies win "backfire" in the faces of those who are trying to "shove them down the throats of the people." The North Carolina Democrat at tacked the government's power and water resource programs In a speech before a regional meeting of the National Rural Electric Co operative Association. A House Government Operations Subcommittee today resumed an Investigation of the power policies. It summoned for questioning to day H. T. Nelson of the Bureau of Reclamation and William A. Pearl, administrator of the Bon neville Power Administration. Scott told the cooperative asso ciation that allowing private in terests to develop Hells Canyon on the Idaho-Oregon border would be "a clear case of selfish Interests trying to snatch away something that belongs to all of the people of this country." He said he Is confident Congress will set aside the Federal Power Commission's ruling to allow Idaho Power Co. to build three small hydroelectric dams In the canyon. Public power boosters favor a single high dam built by the fed eral government. The senator also said the Col umbia River Basin should be de veloped on a scale that would mean a "new era of economic progress for the entire Pacific Northwest." J fef ' L 7 MM .,:( s . Red Builder Buys Home SAN BRUNO. Calif." (UP J I. K. Kozuilia, head of a touring group o! Soviet builders, bought a typicaj furnished American home yester day, and he wants It delivered. The model home, built for dis play at the Rollingwood tract, will be shipped to Russia precut. Each niece will be marked for assembly by Russian carpentera in Moscow. Richard Doyle, executive secre tary of the Associated Home Build ers of San Frnnclsco, hosts to the Russians in the Bay Area, td Kczutlia expressed great f i , t y tor the home. Kozuilia asked the builder ii -, could ship the hou.se to Russia ''K a package unit. He also ordered the complete furnishings of the building. Doyle described the home as a "contemporary American family bungalow" typical of the U.S. mid dle income dwelling. He said it was a three-bedroom split-level wooden frame job for hillside construction. He said the home, complete with furnishings, sells for $17,750 in San Bruno and said he believed it mould cost the Russian about 33 per cent more to have it shipped to. Russia pie-cut. The Russian delegation left to day lor Los Angeles, and will wind up its tour of U.S. housing develop ments in Texas. Episcopal Convention Sets Naming Coadjutor Bishop Jif.L'jjQ V iiii riif aT-riiffl a'fii nit m if r rr - ' A DOE WITH ANTLERS was killed recently by Ken Sullivan, 2445 Applegate Avenue, who shot the animal on Bryant Moun tain in the Langell Valley area. The doe, shown here after being skinned, had a spike on one side and a fork on the other. Sullivan said that the antlers were still in velvet, and surmised that the doe probably did not know she should have rubbed it off. Accompanying Sullivan on the trip was Jim Nork of Langell Valley. 'Special Interest' Denial Made By Former President Ralph Reno Admits Killing HOLLYWOOD (UP) Police aid today a 27-year-old ex-convlct will be permitted to see a priest be fore he signs a confession in which he admitted strangling his attract ive young stepmother and stabbing his father. Ralph Reno, returned here last night by Hollywood detectives from Reno, asked to see the priest be fore signing his confession. He told officers that after he strangled Mrs. Stella Reno, 34, with a box er's skip rope. He stabbed his father, Andrew Reno, 67. But Reno also insisted that his father later helped him carry the woman's body out of the family home last Wednesday to the trunk of the auto In which he drove to Nevada where he waa arrested. The father denied his son's story about helping to move the body. "He's lying." said Reno, recov ering from stab wounds and head injuries at Oeneral Hospital. "He's absolutely crazy." Reno, a former welterweight fighter, said he killed his step mother to climax a dozen years of almost constant arguments with her. WASHINGTON ( Former President Herbert Hoover denies that the Water Resources Task Force of the second Hoover Com mission on Government Reorgan ization was packed with "special interests." He says further that the commis sion determined at the outset. that "party politics" should not enter into any of its conclusions and that he "never even heard mentioned a reference to political party effect of any conclusion." Hoover set forth his views In an article In the November issue of the Democratic Digest, Demo cratic National Committee publica The September issue of the party monthly had accused Hoover ol having "stacked" commission task forces in a move to "turn back the clock" on government policy. The article was especially critical with regard to the sub-group water resources from which it said public power advocates were ex cluded. The Digest invited Hoover to pre sent his side after he "questioned the conclusions" -of the September analysis. In his answer Hoover said the commission, assigned to the Job of Iinamg means to improve effici ency and reduce costs in govern ment, "never divided on political grounds." He said no inquiry was made as to party affiliations of task force members, though they did include both Democrats and Republicans as did the commission as a whole. A motion was made to include three persons on the water re sources task force "who believe in the principle of federal public pow. er development." Hoover said, but It was turned down 10-1 with three Democrats among the majority. Lake HS Students Attend Meeting - LAKE VIEW Heidi Tax, Dariene Johnson, Anna Rose Lamb, ..Jack Bracken and Bob Lamb represents ed the Lakevlew High School at the annual meeting of High School Student Councils. Region 2 at Red mond on October 17, 18. Mrs. Robert Weir Jr. accomnan. led the students who spent Mon- dny night in Redmond except Hei di, an American Field Service ex chance student from Austria. She was the guest of Ingrid Schatzbur- Iter, also an AFS student, at the Alvln Goodrich home In Bend. PORTLAND Wl A special Episcopal convention prepared to ballot Tuesday on selection of a coadjutor bishop lor the Oregon Episcopal Diocesn. Twelve men, six from Oregon and six from outside the state, were nominated at Monday's ses sion. They are: The Rev. George R. V. Bolstc:. 55. St. Mark's Medford. The Rev. Charles Scott Nevill, 39. Church of The Good Samaritan, Corvallls. , Rev. Louis Bowes Keller, 11 Saints, Portland. e Rev. George R. Turncy. 48, St. jjichacl's and All Angels', Port land. The Rev. Alfred S. Tyson, 40, St. George's, Roseburg. The Rev. Perry H. Smith. 57, St. Mary's, Eugene. The Rev. James W. Carmen. 52. dean of Trinity Cathedral, Phoenix, Ariz. Tho Rev. John P. Crauie, 44, dean of Christ Church Cathedral, Indianapolis, Ind. The Rev. Charles M. Gullbert, 47. Grace Cathedral, San Fran cisco. . The Rev. Lesley Wilder Jr., 43, St. Mathew's, San Mateo. Calif. Th.- Rev. John Compton Lcftler, 55, dean of St. Mark's Cathedral, Seattle. The Rev. Robert Noel Rosen- mayer, 47, a prolessor at the Di vinity School of the Pacific, Berke ley, Calif. The duties of the coadjutor will be to aid Bishop Benjamin Dag well in administrative work of the Oregon Diocese. He will be In line to succeed Dagwell when the bish op retires in July, 1058. In a talk which opened the con ration, the bishop announced that e was dividing the diocese into .wo parts and that the new co adjutor would serve as head of one of them while Dagweli would lead the other. The northern district will Include Clatsop, Tillamook, Lincoln, Col iimblit, Yamhill, Polk, Marion, Washington, Clackamas and Mult nomah counties. The southern district will include Benton, Linn, Lane, Douglas, Jo sephine, Jackson, Coos and Curry counties. Dagwell said he will wait until (he new coadjutor is elected before deciding to which district the new man will be assigned. Hammond Organ Chord Organ largest stork lra ins make pianos In this Dart of the wrst Rent a Spinet Diana Rental pur--huia plan. LOUIS Ft. MANN PIANO CO. 120 No. 7t The reason, he said, was that such a move would have required bal ancing the group with three public utility representatives. . Denying specifically that the wa ter resources task force was "packed with special Interests," Hoover wrote that' both parties were represented and that the membership comprised '' 15 engi neers, 6 lawyers, 3 governors or former governors and a public ac countant. ' i Friendly Helpfulness To Everv Creed and Pure Ward's Klamath Funeral Home "Marguerite M, Ward , . and Sons 925 High' Phone 3334 VAN ORMAN'S 527 Main Mauldin Bags Seven-Pointer A seven point buck was shot Sunday by Paul Mauldin, 827 Rose Street, it was reported here today. Mauldin, a salesman at Parker Pontiac, said he took the buck on Goodlow Mountain, about 20 miles east of Bonanza. He said the buck ' had seven points on one side and four on the other, "He was so darned big, we had to cut off his head to get him into the car." Mauldin said. Others in the party were his wife, his brother-in-law and wife. I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Yancey, and Ed Morgan. The visitors were from Travis Air Force base, near Fairfield. California. He said that the trip was an annual event for the visitors. I Smouldering Beans Raise Hue And Cry A pot of beans caught fire yes terday, and smoked up the resi dence of Rodney Hnney, 4744 Frie da, the Suburban Fire Department reported today. There were no Injuries, and no damage, except to the beans. EXCITING FOOD NEWS SEE WED. NIGHTS PAPER 97 SUPPER CLUB I FEATURING VERA MASON Doncinq "Dclovely" TV Artist Opens Tonight Special Dinner Show Nightly 10:15 P.M. 97 SUPPER CLUB Chaica St.aVs 1.50 tenther Fried Chicken MS 3 Shows Sat. Night First Show At 9:30 P.M. No Cover Week Nights New '56 DODGE Everything about it says SUCCESS! I r-s A r b if Born of Succcst to Challenge ttrc future! THe Dfsmette New 56 Oodgt. THE MAGIC TOUCH OF TOMORROW From the moment your finger presses the Magic Touch push-hut-ton control, you will know that this during new '56 Dodge is the newest, the most exciting car on the road! It is the car born of success, born for success. Its revolutionary ad vances are your rewards in the great Dodge advance a dividend of extra value made possible by the greatest sales gain in the industry. There is the look of tuctent in the soaring Jet Fins that make this '58 Dodge the most distinctive car on the road. There is the power ofmircert up to 2:10 h.p. in the 6rcu-nii thrust of new Dodge engines, V-8 and 6. There is the feci oj succcts in the effortless ease of jUfljte Touch push button driving. Come see and drive the car America is talking about! New '56 Dodge The Success Car of the Year! News flathl New '56 Dodge shottars avery Amaricnn stock car record. AAA calls 11: "Most amaiing demonstration In automotive history." n i mi 1 -Vft-y Ky ..... .. -- " V-ii r - - -- - : ' - m mm,, Ta .A,,,, i i ....... n, ,,i .1 immmm CUNNINGHAM & RICKEY MOTORS So. 7th & Commercial I Tle I fh.n. I1M