Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 21, 1956, Page 5, Image 5

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

    1
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21. 195S
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE FIVE
rn r
Annual Spring Park Work
Almost Done, Bonney Says
f.:
if L
E. DOYLE ANTHONY has
been named manager of
Swift and Company's Klam
ath Falls sales unit, succeed-''
ing Paul L. Stewart, manager
here for two years and two
months who leaves April I to
head the hotel-restaurant di
vision for Swift in the central
territory with headquarters
in San Francisco. The two men
started working for Swift and
Company in 1947 in the Fres
no branch. Anthony has serv
ed as replacement manager
in several branches, including
Astoria and was assisting the
Fresno manager at the time
of his promotion. His wife
and two children are with him
and they are looking for a
two or three bedroom house
for rent.
The annual round of spring and
winter preparations lor the com
ing summer season in the city's
park and recreation facilities is
Just about complete. City Recre
ation Director Bob Bonney report
ed today.
All equipment such as power
mowers has had Its winter over
haul. Wooden playground apparatus
has been repainted and is ready
to be re-erected. And plans are
well under way (or a season
which Bonney estimates will "at
least equal" last year's total of
118.493 persons using the facili
ties. However, Bonney said, there Is
still a lot to be done. The Moore
?arlc play area is being moved,
and more equipment. Including a
.vading pool, is being aducd.
Bleachers are to be constructed
on top of the filter building at the
swimming pool, and should be
completed before it opens in May.
PARK ADDITION
In addition to these improve
ments, work will be getting start
ed on a new addition to tne city
park system. The first stages in
the work on the Kiwanis spon
sored park on Kit Carson Way is
slated for this summer with grad
ing, leveling, the preparation oi
Church Group
Hears Politico
MILTON-FREE WATER Ifl
The United States "spends too
little to wage the peace in com
parison with what we spend in
preparation to wage war," Philip
Hitchcock said Tuesday.
He told the annual meeting of
the Oregon Council of Churches
that "if we build our security at
the expense of making' other peo
ple feel insecure, we will have no
security." He urged that the
United States do more of its inter
national aid work through the
United Nations.
Hitchcock, who Is Immediate
past president of the council, said
that one of the chief causes of
war is "the deprived and de
praved conditions of three-fourths
of the peoples in the world," in
cluding the non-whites who are
"resentful of ideas of white su
premacy." Hitchcock came here In the
course of his campaign for Re
publican nomination to the U. S.
Senate. x
New 4-H Club
Organized
NEW PINE CREEK A new 4-H
livestock club was formed here
last week with Raymond Cook
volunteering his services as leader
for the first year.
This is the first time the county
leaders of Modoc and Lake coun
ties have acquiesced in the com
mon functional problems of a state
line town. The club will accept
members from either side of the
line so the youngsters who ordi
narily play together can also work
together in various club activities.
PNW Spring
Floods Seen
-it vwraT . in WHh the snow
packed deep in the mountains, the
spring floods even under normal
weather conamons, a wcuuici ex
pert warned Tuesday.
Anthony J. Polos of the U.S.
Weather Bureau's River Forecast
Center at Portland told a meeting
called to consider stepa to deal
with high water that the Columbia
and other rivers east oi tne cas
cades are certain to spill over
Only below normal temperatures
and extremely ngni rains can pic
vent It, foios warnea.
. vnrintr thW. he Said
will send the Columbia u 25 to 28
feet at Vancouver wnere uie uoou
stage is 15 feet. Portland, Long-view-Kelso,
and such upstream
noints as The Dalles also may ex
pect flooding.
T3nin tain nnrmal weather also
will send the Yakima, Okanogan,
Wenatchee ana rena ureme liv
ers over their banks and warm
.v.. anri hoaw m ins can
cause flooding of the Spokane,
M.tl-niu nr1 KirAUft Kivers.
Serious flooding is not expected
west of the cascades, however, he
said. . , .
Representatives oi teaerai, siai.
local and private agencies aueno
... 4h m.ailnff railed bv GOV
Langlle to outline steps to be tak
en before, during ana liter me
expected nooas.
Baptists Plan
Church Program
NEW PINE CREEK An exten
sive church improvement program
has been undertaken here by the
men of the Baptist Church. A new
baptistry will be constructed and
rest room facilities are being added
to the church's social hall.
The Rev. Gordon Harris, the
Rev. Eugene Barrow, James A.
Vincent, Joe Ayoutt and Howard
Wells led the work of tearing down
and burning the antiquated out
buildings to clean up the church
premises preparatory to building
the new additions.
the seed bed and the installation
of a sprinkler system on the agen
da. The top drawing card in last
year's season was Moore Park,
which drew 325,624 people. The
park, open' the year around, is
used heavily about 190 days a
year, Bonney said.
The next single drawing card
was the swimming pool, which
drew a total of 104 662. including
68,831 swimmers. The rest were
spectators and users of the Jvad
ing pool. Bonney said he calcu
lates the city profit on each paid
admission is about three fourths
of a cent.
The five supervised playgrounds.
Kiwanis. Fairview, stukel, Pell-
can and Roosevelt, drew a total
of 127.463 users, and the six un
supervised playgrounds drew a to
tal ot 14.780.
Veterans Memorial Park drew
14.300. and Maple Park drew 3120.
NATATORIVM
The Klamath Union High School
Natatorlum drew 1,636 recreatlon-
1 users, and the four athletic
fields had 102,004 users.
Other recreation department fa
cilities Include indoor sports and
gym facilities, street sledding and
special events.
In computing the number of
users. Bonney figured that each
time a person used a facility, he
constituted a user. So, if a single
person used the parks more than
once, he became "several users."
Bonney said that the park sys
tem costs approximately $3.60 per
capita based on a Klamath Falls
population of 15,000. This, he said,
is considerably less than, recom
mended by national recreational
experts, but he said their recom
mendation Is based on a nation
wide average which does not take
any special considerations into
account.
ERNEST BORGNINE tries to figure out Betsy Blair in this
scene from "Marty," now showing at the Towar with the
second feature, "Summertime." Nine Academy Award nom
inations best picture, actor, supporting actress, supporting
actor, direction, screen play art direction cam from
"Marty," Nominations for best actress and bast director went
to "Summertime."
ANNUAL SNOW FAIR,
j NORTHFIELD, Mass. W A
group of Northfleld residents has
found a way to make use of the
huge piles of snow that line the
streets after two billiards. They
Invited the children to line main
street with snow sculptures. If
the Idea works out they'll make
an annual aifalr of It, they said.
Ike Favorite
In Carolina
RALEIGH. N. C. (, President
Eisenhower, is the overwhelming
favorite of North Carolina's 28
delegates who will help choose
the Republican ticket at the par
ty's national convention at . San
Francisco this August.
Of 24 delegates contacted in an
Associated Presa poll of their pref
erences for the national ticket,
eight came out sohaly for Rich
ard Nixon as vice presidential
nominee.
The other 16 hedged the ques
tion. Most picked "Nixon, if Ike
wants him," and about three of
these indicated they might prefer
someone else. Several wouldn't
comment.
Sen. William Knowland of Cali
fornia was mentioned three times
by those who indicated a secon
dary choice for the presidential
nomination If Elsenhower is not
available. Gov. Christian Herter
or Massachusetts was named
Iwice. and Gov. Theodore McKel
ain of Maryland and Milton Ei
senhower. Uie President's brother,
once each.
Herter got six mentions for the
vice presidential spot as a sec
ondary choice; Knowland got four.
Only one man of the 24 did not
name Elsenhower as his choice
(or the top spot on the ticket.
Charles D. Owen Jr. of Ashevllle,
u detegateat-large, declined any
comment until he la offically no
tified of his election as a delegate.
TOP NOTCH SAWYER WANTED FOR PINE MILL
Must b lobtr and dtptndoblt. Prtftr a family man in hit thirtiai,
who can get both grade and production. Wa aipact 6500' par hour,
and all tha grada rtcovtry thara it in tha log. Wo are cutting 54 Shop,
Moulding and Bettor, 44 and eV4 Shop and Better, and tome 74 rip
groda Dimension.
Mill ii located at Oilman, New Meiico, 60 milei from Albuquere.ua.
Good house provided with REA power and flush plumbing. Good tele
vision reception. Groda tchoel in camp. Located at foot of mountains in
ideal climate, with good trout stream 100 yards from camp.
Good salary, and guaranteed yaer around operation.
Mill ii seven years eld, V Klamath band mill, 12" shotgun with Martin
controller and 145lb. steam pressure. Light weight carriage with "Sel
Set" setworks (sawyer sets his own blocks). Mill fully electrified otherwise.
Hove re saw en green chain for splitting 84. Wa have been here 31
years and hava our awn timber.
If Interested and capable, contact Yele Weinstein or C .K. Wickens.
New Mexico Timber Co. P.O. Box 968, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
A Beautiful Memorial
Is Like Fresh Flowers Every Day
Clarence Ward
Klamath Monument Co.
Representing Oregon Granite Co. of Medford
and Meyeriohn-Wengler
925 High St. Phone 3334 or 9333
ffiS ff Sturdy aluminum A 1
l and blue package UJ
fetm e
Wrap Coolf Cover Cap
Tdth. neWALCOAWRAP
Aluminum Foil
now at your store
Ellsworth Hopes
For Access Road
WASHINGTON Wl Rep. Ells
worth (R-Ore) Tuesday said he
hoped the Senate would reinstate
a two-million dollar access roaa
proect in the appropriation for
forest activities.
He also urged the House Ap
propriations Committee to recon
sider $750,000 for timber inventor
ies. Both projects, which were
planned for O&C timberlands,
were eliminated by the committee.
Ellsworth did not propose an
amendment to reinstate the items. (
He said his remarks were aimed
at atresjine the importance of the
projects. He then expressed his
hope that the items will be rein-
stated by the Senate and accept
ed later by the House. j
. Ellsworth said that the two mil-i
lion dollars will a to and be di
vided up by Oregon's 18 O&C
counties if it is not appropriated.
Visiting Reds
Tour Power Site
BIRMINGHAM. Englend Iff
Georei Malenkov and his ' j unite t
x Soviet electricians toured the
Bitrantic Hams Hall power station
Wednesday. Thev showed lively in
terpst in th massive Renerators
which supply power (or the in
dustrial midlands.
The frrmcr Soviet premier, now
minister of power stations, chatted
with technicians and workers while
his experts 'looked over the ma
chinery pnd made notes.
From Hams Hall. Malenkov went
to inspect the English Electrical
Co. plant at Stafford, where simi
lar generators are being built fcr
the Soviet Union.
COC Gl'EST
Lt. W. J. Cook. Ground Observer
Corps area officer from Redding,
will be a euest at the regular meet
in? of the local GOC Thursday,
March 22. at 8 p.m. in the lecture
room of the County Library. Lt.
Cook is in Oregon visiting the pec
tors. Anyone interested in GOC
work invited to attend this
meeting.
O People Read
SPOT ADS
-you are.
with the robert curley hair styling kit!
MONDAY
TVESDAY" WEDNESDAY .
to it jroursefl m mimrtes-ar-irs"ejsy as A B C! For
the Robert Cvriey Kit contains all you need to
Change your hair style daily right m your own home! Nourishes
bleached, dyed hair, brings back "permanent" hair to lite,
lustre and loveliness . works wonders regardless
(A hair texture or color even J your hair as straight s I string!
0
3
1
Kit contains Robert' Ctirley'Xs
Conditioner. Hair Styler, and LanotM
(Compound) Cream Shampoo .M
together with complete easy to
instructions and illustrations.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
FREE
DEMONSTRATION
By '
ROBERT CURLEY
REPRESENTATIVE
Thursday, Mar. 22nd
Friday, Mar. 23rd
Af
100
pliu )! I'd. let'
Voa uw (I OJ .
when yw
buy the kit.
2212 South 6th Street
"Your Neighborhod Druggist"
Double Brown StrAnps Wi Every "Robert Curlcv" These Two Days
n wmm&mm -
Phone 4321
W e'v'e just the shoes for active young feet
... pretty shoes jor girls, hand
some shoes for boys , . . shoes
1 l
ear x' v-e-i
that give proper support
to feel on-lhe-grow
and on the go.
SAoes
ALL LITTLE YANKEE itylee . . .
doreni of them ... are designed for
better fit; aryl our friendly sales,
people Uke pride in fitting
little feet in ju$t the right
i nd width.
W by
ROBIN HOOD
DELICIOUS
CWolate Pray
OVML
GIFT
$4.95 to $7.50
Black Patent
or White Kid
S&H Green Stamps
EVRY
YOUtfQ
CUSTOMER
d.
3690 SOUTH 6TH ST
o