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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1956)
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1956 PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TheyH Do It Every Time -" By Jimmy Hatlo AIRMEN GET VACCINE SAN ANTONIO, Tex.' (-Doe. tors administered Salk polio vac cine to almost 10.000 airmen at Lackland Air Force Base yester. day. Maj. Gen. John H. MeCorm ick ordered the shots for all mili. tary personnel after five officers were stricken ith paralytic polio. The general 4Vas one of the Iirsl vaccinated. SUBSCRIPTION RATES CARRIER 1 MONTH . 1 M MONTHS I 0 I YEAR 111 OO MAIL , prank jBoam Bdltor entered u second eliue matter si the pou ctflc at Klamath fall. Or., oo August 30, 1906, under act at Ooocreu, March . ir . SESV1CES: ASSOCIATED PRESS . UNITED PRESS - " AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California BILL JENKINS American Indians used wampum for money... Editor I MONTH - MONTHS I YEAR . f 1 60 I SO $12.00 MAX WAOCHOPX Cltr Editor M Ttue -n icen MC VTi ICTPM ir lUS f-y;- 1 NEVER HE4RO Ant OF V vf FINE STUFF.'! ME W LISTEN TO THE YJJX tusm PkliO.vVBiiTHER GUVS F 0 SORTED fTHEwfTEry BRCUGMT ALL My 1 HERE CLAMS JiSeD lSs STARTED OS OFF-A A FRIENDS .'THEY'RE HE GOT THE A Ep-&! If WE ALMOST H4DOUR V ') GETVH' TOO HISH f PL4CE X"JjA raq ". A I LICENSE PICKED UP M 4 AUD MIGf-fry FOR i --V Y FOR SELLING TO y THEIR OWN Gff li " ludlaii Law By MAX WAUCH0PE ,by men of the Old Stone Age. i the original Bi&sell Sept. 1. 1876,. shadow over the whole American 'While they may often date from a 'who soon began to manufacture oil scene. Should the canal traffic lioi. 0ili- natl thev have not il. . iStop. our wells might be called The inadequacies of Public Lawjbeen "buried" nor are they "pre-j He died a few years later, how-rn to increase output by one 587, which provides for the lermi-. served in rock. Krozen mam-eVer. and it was wife, Anna, whoi"""ion oarreis a uay. nation of federal supervision ol;moths and bones in tar beds are: really put the carpet sweeper I 1 the' property ol the-Klamath In- different. We decide that they shall j over. She hired a governess r IIaIanaP Sheet dian Tribe, have been agreed uponjDe called fossils and turn to sorne-jher five children, took over the). .. P M XIrf,JVj ho iuct ahf.nl nmw concerned. ; I hino li... ' -nmalnxl in morr in the! 01. MCViUS.K either Indian or white. ' J That "something" is not in the , industry until her death in 1934 ! l"nitexi Press Staff Correspondent Timber exiwrts have pointed out i definition but deals with the fanvjat 88. . . . The week's good and bad news that il termination ,is carried outiliar word "extinct. This be-t when the electric vacuum clean- on the international balance sheet: by 1938 as specified by the law, j come somewhat confusing sinceer came along. - everyone pre- - : SUEZ serious damage could result to the i a great many plants and animals! dieted it would do to the carpet Deadlock and disunity marked forest -economy of the. Klamath i preserved as fossils do belong to sweeper what the auto did to the i the eighth week of the Suez Canal Basin This balanced economy is 'species that vanished from life: horse. But it no more hurt the dispute. based to a large extent, on a sus-j long ago. Other species, however. . Saie of carpel sweepers thani President Gamal Abdel Nasser tained yield cutting of the timber: did not die out and though they carpet sweepers did the market ;0f Egypt remained unyielding in resources of the reservation and have left remains In rocks of ear-jfor brooms. Housewives still find; his determination to exert com- provisions ol the law wouia maneiuer ages mey mc iuuvj mey can use au inree. this impossible. j living in the world today. In Iowa -v,'e may have made a mistake Thorough stud.es of the problem and Wisconsin the bones o( the m not going in for vacuum clean . ' " .i... red fox are to be found in Ice m - admtted Bissel . "As a nave . j ,h.r. mdi .... -r .... , ma rtw . " T" 70 per cent of the Indians wouia . - - --.mauei u. . w counter nasser 5 action, elect to withdraw from the tribe ' v toda - 0n ,he Atlantic : iirsl came out. But the early j Umier this . plan, canal users and take their share of tribal i Coast hard shell clams live in . vacuum cleaners required a lot : would try to send ships through nrooerty in cash This would neces- abundance near shores where their io( repairs. We were afraid a gad- the canal with their own pilots. If sitate the selling of approximately I"" re common fossils in 10 that had to be fixed so often 1 Nasser refused, the users would as much as two-billion-six-hundred million year old rocks The fact jwouid ruin our reputation, so we! boycott the canal, and sixty million board feet of 0"" ""V have not died out does dropped it. j But dissension arose at once in timber j not keep them from being fossils. "That's one of the troubles with ju,e conference. Some oi the 18 na- Thu' of course would mean a There are "me writers who carpet sweepers. They practical-j ti0ns thought the plan too risky gtntling of the pine market and have sou8ht to use . the word,iy never wear out. People occas-,and demanded that the canal dis. would probably preclude the use!"'sir for petrified remains only sionally bring us one that is 5o;pute he put before the United of good sustained yield practices I and ana;nt bones or to 60 years old and want up to Nations. w i - f r ... that hat'l nnt twn rhanffPfl 1 .U..;M it V.,.. .... V,-,. . orlnntttH I s... j .: iciuuu H. iwn ua,v B-., toners urgea lunner negoiia a policy not to tinker with anyUions with Nasser, over 25 years old." soviet Premier Nikolai A. Bui- plete control over the canal. Delegates of 18 countries met in London to discuss a plan for a Suez Canal users association to ort this amount of the reservation ! shells that have not been changed timber, which represents about 70 per-cent of the available timber resources ol the reservation. Another long range effect of rapid cutting of so much timber would be its damage to ine Basin s watershed and. correlated agricul tural economy. Water experts have reminded all lhat the reservation timber blankets the Basin't water shed. The wanton cutting of the treer would-mean a rapid runoff each spring with the lakes unable to hold all the water and would result- in less water for agricul to're and power. Based on these, and other consid erations, the management special ists (originally three, now two Southern Oregon men) have come up with recommendations for ctyinges In law including: 1. A. guarantee of a fair market for the resources currently held by the tribe; 2. the Indians would be guaranteed fishing and hunting rights for the remainder of their lives; 3. tribal members would be granted the right to purchase cer tain lands now owned by the tribe by competitive bidi with other members of the trine; 4. all nun ecal rights would be reserved to members of the tribe for a period of 20 years: S. all termination costs would be borne by the fed eral government (they are now being paid out of tribal funds). Payment to the Indians for the lands (the specialists recommend that the government buy the land and continue to supervise it) would be made to members of the tribe by the government in the form of 20-year bonds,- maturing quarterly or semi-annually. In ad dition to a reasonable cash down payment which would be immedi ately distributed to the tribal members. At a recent meeting of Klamath tribal leaders with officials of the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs in Portland, one tribal leader stated that termination by 1938 would "throw the Klamath tribe into chaos and put the members in the poor house." Afler hearing many of these ob jections to Public Law 587 in the past several months, the present secrelary of the interior this week ordered a new study of possible amendments which could be pre sented to the next session of Congress. And the Senate Interior and In soJar Affairs Committee has sched ufed a hearing in Klamath Falls on October 18 to discuss the prog to stone as being "not truly fos silized," this is in error for ivory obtained from the tusks of masto dons taken from the muskeg of Alaska is every bit a fossil as the agate bones of dinosaurs from the sandstone of Colorado. .Many fossils seem strange when How far will a carpet sweeper go? Bissell said they put a pedo meter on one in a hotel1, and it was still wheeling along strong after 9.000 miles. The first caroet sweepers were we find them today. They were . cumbersome affairs of wood and vmni 9ni "noutraii.!" inHia as even more strange to men who , ca5t jron weighing up to 15 pounds i the six nations. came upon mem many centuries; ana selling tor w to s. loaay Because of the disunity in the ganin suggested in an interview with the International News Serv ice a six-nation meeting to seek a "just and practicable" settlement. He named the United States, Great Britain. France. Russia. ago. A fossil lamp shell was one of the amulets used by a Neander thal man of southern France late in the Ice Age. but there is no reason to think that he knew it for what it was a fossil shell. Much later, sometime about 450 B.C., the Greek Herodotus trav eled in Africa. Noting fossil shells in the Libyan Desert and Egypt, Herodotus correctly concluded that the Mediterranean once had cov ered those countries. Herodotus was less famous than Aristotle who followed him a half century later, however, Aristotle apparently knew what a tew fos sils looked like but thought that they formed in mud without be coming alive. Theophrastus (362- 284 B.C.), Aristotle's most famous student, actually wrote a book about fossils, in which he decided that some of them were made by a "plastic force inside the earth, while others came from eggs or seeds that were buried in sedi ment and grew inside the rocks. Several centuries later, Strabo (54 B.C.-25 A.D.) noticed that great numbers of round, flattish shells weathered from the rocks in the pyramids of Egypt, legend said that they were petrified lentils dropped from lunches of slaves who built the tombs, btrabo re jected that explanation but offered none of his own. He had no idea that the presumed "lentils" were shells of one-celled marine ani mals that lived about 50 million years ago. Thus matters stood until almost 1500 A.D., when a system of drain age canals was dug near Milan. Italy. Leonardo da Vinci had charge of the project; as a sub ject of interest he studied fossil shells that came from the soft rocks of the Tertiary age through which the canals were dug. Leo nardo decided that the shells be- they are made of lighter metals, I London conference the United weight about 7 poundi, can be adjusted to different rug thick nesses, have the wheels in the center so they can handle wall- to-wall carpeting, average 112.95. Bissell dispatched one of his de- States, Britain and France the sponsors of the users association, were compelled to revise their plan in hope of getting agree ment. RED CHINA luxe $19.95 models, designed as, n,. Chinese Communist Party a wedding gift to brides, to (held its first congress since 1945. Queen Elizabeth to help her "neat Speeches by party leaders up" Buckingham Palace. . hacked any belligerent tone. Peace, ne is prouu oi ine variea uses disarmament and national indus- to which his granddad's invention have been put. Indian ladies have bought them to tidy up their tepees," he said. "They ve kept the White House clean under both Democratic and Republican administrations, and they've been used on the St. An drew's gfflf course in Scotland to fluff up the greens. The carpet sweeper industry has never undergone a long depres sion, and Bissell sees a prosper ous future for it as long as people use rugs. "Maybe even longer." ' he re marked. "We're working on a new model now that'll sweep bare floors." rmarji x3 velopment were the Change By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK UH As the sun slips across the Equator tomor row it 11 set up some special prob lems for business and industry. And it will bring all the old fa miliar change - overs for other businesses aggravated this year by such cross purpose trends as greater demand from an in creased population and tight cred it. Business will cater, too, to the high spending mood of those in the money and the budget con sciousness of those who aren't. While the sun tan lotion and bathing suit salesmen trek south, the peddlers of pills step up pro longed to mollusks which lived jduction of potions aimed at drying when the sea covered that part of Italy. More than a century later, Steno, a Dane who lived in Flor ence, accepted Leonardo's conclu sion for backboned animals as well as mollusks. He specially men tioned fossil shark teeth, compar ing them with teeth of sharks liv- icm.oI the termination and to ing in the Mediterranean, hear interested persons. The Sen- While Leonardo and Steno were ate group has stated that besides! right, their contemporaries, how-1 zona and Hawaii. Cruise ship own- rex tewing tne progress ot lermi-' ever, would not believe them. For ers report demand mis season run nation they will take testimony on I almost 300 years later, m e n mng far ahead of last. possilije legislation to correct in- who should have known better adequacies of the Public Law 587. called fossils "accidents." "mys With members ot Congress, and tenes or frauds" hidden in rocks candidates, from both parties in: by the Devil, tax or of a more realistic law for' . up the sniffles of America's 130 million cold sufferers. With an eye on the oncoming Canadian cold waves, clothing stores are flooding the newspapers with ads for top coats and furs. Winter resort owners are also happy. Advance reservations fore shadow a record fall and winter season in Florida. California, Ari- trial (them: Mao Tse-tung. the No. 1 Chinese Red leader, noted "a trend to ward relaxation in the internation al situation." Marshal Peng Teh-hliai, defense minister, said that the armed forces now numbered 2.7 million fewer men than they did at peak strength in 1949. Premier Chou En-lai outlined a vast program of international de velopment for the country s sec. ond five-year plan, to start in 1958. The plan called for doubling expenditures on construction. MR. K RIDES AGAIN Nikita S. Khrushchev, leader of the Russian Communist Party, roused keen diplomatic interest by paying an unexpected visit to President Tito of Yugoslavia. Dispatches indicated that the visit was a surprise to Tito him selfand a somewhat Unwelcome one because it might hurt his chance of getting continued Amer ican aid. Officially, Khrushchev was just taking a vacation in his visit. Speculation in Western capitals was that he was trying to induce Titc to give up his policy of bal ancing Yugoslavia between West and East. INDEPENDENCE Britain took a new step In its long-range program of holding its vast Commonwealth together by giving its smaller units home rule. It was announced in London that the Gold Coast, its valuable cocoa producing colony on the west coast of Africa, will be given in dependence as a full member of the British Commonwealth effec tive next March (. termination of federal jurisdiction -,om ILki... of the reservation, it is probably not too optimistic to predict that By HAL BOYLE UOtPN By UiMifcu PHr-aa CASTEL GONDOLFO, Italy - Pope Pius XII telling some 400 Special problems assail the steel ; scientists from 22 countries their mills and railroads, however. Due 'efforts to conquer space are legit' to strikes in the steel and Great iimate Lakes shipping industries , last "When God told men: Conquer summer, movement of iron ore is the earth. He did not intend to now 13 million tons behind last! limit the efforts of mankind to year with freezing weather threat-lour planet, but to extend them to emng to cut off the water route, the whole created universe. l'h,HPn( Ull hj, ma.l in 1UKN LR f;il4t What .klt TV,. -ill kit th mill. ! Law 587 in the next session of : common household article, in-1 a time when production it running LONDON Secretary of State Congress, t'h.inces extremely vital vented 80 years ago this week, is ahead of last year. John Foster Dulles explaining to to the residents ot Ihe Klamath enjoying its greatest boom ever?! The Great Lake Shippers' Ad-: the Sues conference the need for Hasin.. Indian and lute. "ell, sir, it i the old-fashioned visory Board In Cleveland thinks the proposed canal users associa I carpet sweeper, now thoroughly ! the depleted ore stocks at the 'tion to have its own pilots: l''o.sll.. .glamorized. mills will mean 22 per cent in-l "Some of us may not be willing Hv'kfm t l i- nu ' Thl ,noud ,n' 'ar crease in ore movement by rail to have pilots from countries not rv. , .t ,'n nl,,'y." ' Melville R. Bis- this winter. And Interstate Com- entirely friendly to us and who en- The history of the prehistoric I sell. 111. S5 dominant manuf ac-! merce Commission sources fear gage in espionage to pilot their i.. uwu annm uy me'iurer in tne tieio. world output that, starting next month, a worse ships through the canal." fossil remains of creatures that may reach 3 million units thisicar shortage than last year Willi once ived upon the earth, it is year, and that figure may double be building up. The higher cost' BOSTON - Conlessed Brinks' remaniaoie indeed now well the by 1961." i0t getting their ore by rail will bandit Joseph iSpecs" O'Keefe geologist can read the story of the An attack of hay fever led to plague steelmen. Itestifying how he and eight other past by these objects. A fossil by the invention ot the carpet iep-! Oversupply is the problem for defendants itudied plans of the .. ...r ....,,,. or ricr rr, ine oiggeit improemenl in the oil industry as it starts its'Brinks' alarm system: ol an animal or plant ; which lived home cleaning since the first j turn over in emphasis from gas-1 "Even Pino (Anthony) looked "."""" i'"j" -: raveiaay improvised a Broom byioline in fuel oil production. Re-ithem over and he usually con led and preserved in rock. gripping together a handful of fineries are cutting hack output, fined himself to eomie bookl." The words of this definition Ihe .twigs to bruh the debris Irom as well as changing their mix sol geologic past catcnes our eye. it rmr den. , to get more fuel oil and less' WASHINGTON - Adlai t. Ste- rxuunes animal or piam oojecis ine hay lexer victim was Bis- gasoline from a barrel of crude. ivensoa chiding President Eisen which were buried by last years sells grandfather. Melulje R.i Gasoline stocks are at record. hower for "misleading implica mud, norns ot bison covered byiBiisell, Ji year old owner of a high! for thil time of year aome: lions" about Stevenson's draft and dust during the lime of the pioneer grocery store in Grand Rapids, 23 million barrels higher than a H-bomb proposals as doing "both rush to Ihe west and so on. Thesei.Mich. ago-as the big season forlof us an injustice:" lived in the geologic present and The crockery came packed in; gas consumption fadea. Fuel oill "If the President la leads to ine snort span oi yean since tney siraw. recalled Bissell, "and the stocks are up. too. The Supply of foreclose debate on these propos died keeps such objects from be-1 dust raised when they swept out! heavy oil used by factories is al- als. I think he does the nation a Ing ranked as fossils. The words the straw made Grandpa sneeze 'most two million barrels more disservice and 1 must dissent and "buried and preserved" likewise: something awlul. He decided he than a year ago. Store of light I persist in my efforts to invite pub- irrmrs iiiniiaiiuns since 11 rs-.rmu it. u soinrming aoout n. tuei such ai used In homes is up lic attention to matters of such i ludi-s pictographs and petroglyphs The result was Ihe first prarti- atwit three million barrels. ! grax concern as the hvdrogen painted or caned upon rock walls cal carpet sweeper, patented byl The distant Suet Canal eaita a horror and national security." There's 4t le4stone of these euys in EVERy REST4UR4NT LINE4ND HE CM STAY THERE TVunx am A TIP OF 4.7.1..T., DENVER, NO BUMPS, GRINDS themselves as "exotic" or "inter- WARWICK, R. I., -The CityVetive" danrs " lo" as Police Commission says it doesn't 'iar Dt ,nclude bumps nd mind if night club dancers bill I : h, h d...r, mllst wear . "proper" clothes at all times- meaning no bare midriffs. Rent a Soinet Piano SUPPORT Sam Coon 221 Main ' Ph. TU 2-1 130 Geirct Prctr, Ch. K. C. Res. Cm. COME IN SEE WHAT WE HAVE mmm 'mporter 413 Main Phone TU 4-5316 Modern folks use money from PFI Rent may bi applied fr a reason able ttm toward pnrrbaie. Larteftt jiano dock In (his part of the West Hany lead)D( make. LOUIS R. MANN PIANO CO. 120 S: 1th Hammond Orga Chord Ortan Economy Special Spring Mattress & mK $5 DOWN $5 A MONTH Marching Box Spring Same Price 100's of Coili , Sisal Insulation Heavy Tickinq ' Quilted Borders Mattress and CARLSON'S Upholstery Co 2405 So. Sixth Phone TU 4-4510 NEED WAMPUM FOR FALL EXPENSES? ! The American Indian spent months making beadwork wam pum to get things he couldn't make or hunt. Modern folks use money and credit . . . need extra amounts this time of year far heavy fall expenses. How about you? If you need extra wampum for extra-heavy fall expenses, see PF right away. Pfi DIVISION OF PACIFIC FWNCI PACIFIC , 1 1MDUSTRIAL L A. Woodard Mgr. Ph. TU 4-8128 121 So. 9th For that Casual American Leek wear a fashion right ? IV V . f r woWT Th, tM, Me e wtm J 'r III mMmi J flamy wd ItMM Matins mw drtmt that hug cool ond cemforlablo VouareHo..,ond k oxand ol ywt young now flggral Tn "SloyW top dHn your wo ill gonHy but Rrnly. Tno now IAN ION Vauorolto to eowAiro fabric Il cool inoor oy to woor. lol-to.oa gWdlo. No. 51 J. . .17.50. MoloV tog aontio gh Ne. 7 1 7. . . J7 JO. Sarin lottoi ponol front PowAiro lldoc ond bocb. Al irrloi to wkiro. Sue Sow), Modtoa, largo, KoM tan-Ion eoMIe girdU. No. 7J7. . . JS.0 J MoltWng glnflo No. JM....?S. SaHn laitu pomh front and back fowAJro Met, See our Complete Selection of Comfortable VosioreHei ao-too flralot by VnwroHo In fcooo oVoioo ' of IcW i "the best place to (hop after all"