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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1958)
THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGK KIVB IMJJUJ11 . , CITY BRIEFS King of Hearts Ball Interna tional Order of Job's Daughters, Bethel 6, will hold their annual King of Hearts Ball Saturday, Feb ruay 1, at the Willard Hotel at 8:30 p.m. Lots of girls are needed to help decorate at the hotel Sat urday morning, 9 o'clock. Food Sale Klamath Falls Job's Daughters, Bethel No. 61, will hold a baked food sale Sat urday, February 1, at the Oregon Food Store, 4480 South Sixth. Girls, please have your food there early. Benefit Dance. OTI Student Wives will sponsor a benefit dance for the March of Dimes Friday, January 31, at 9:30 p.m. in the Mudent Union Building on the OTI campus. Admission will be by do nation to the March of Dimes. Square Dance The Merry Mix ers are having a square dance Friday night, January 31, at 8 o'clock at the South Sixth Street Community Hall. J. D. Stanley will be calling the dances. Ladies are asked to bring cakes or dough nuts. Card Party The Midland Orange Home Economic Club will Deer Issue Opposition Set REDDING Proposals by. the State Fish and Came Department for either-sex deer hunts will be opposed by the Northern Counties Wildlife Conservation Association. The proposals already have been made to numerous counties by fish and game region managers. Under a new law, consent of, the super visors will be necessary before such hunts can be conducted. In many counties, hearings on the plan have been set for next month. "The law is a result of the doe and fawn slaughter during the 1956 season," said Charles Bull, asso ciation president. . ' "Most hunters feel as we do.that range improvement and other good game management practices will do more to improve our deer herds than killing off the breeding stock. "We intend this year to press for more brush burning and to provide more feed for the herds." Bull pointed out that the Fish 'and Game Department has stressed that deer herds should be con trolled like good cattle herds. "We'll go along on that," he said, "and I should like to remind the department that almost every big ranch and cattle owner in Cal ifornia is opposed to the policy of doe killing. .sponsor a card party at 8 p.m. February 1 in the grange hall. The Klamath County Historical Society will meet Wednesday, Feb ruary 5, 8 p.m. in the community lounge. 118 North Seventh Street. Mrs. Robert S. Adams will tell the story of J. Frank Adams Sr., early settler in the Basin. The public is welcome. Honored Miss Ruth Gustavson, newly appointed Klamath County Home Extension agent will be feted at a reception on Saturday, Feb ruary 1, from 1 to 3 p.m. in the lecture room of the exhibit build ing at the Klamath County Fair grounds. All alumni and county- committee members are asked to be at the building at 11 a.m. Luncheon Scheduled Inter-Agen cy Council will meet for luncheon at noon February 5 in the YMCA headquarters. Eulalona Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet Monday. February 3. 8 p.m in the parish hall of bt. Pauls Episcopal Church. A book on na tior.al defense will be reviewed by a well known local resident. Members are urged to take guests to this meeting and to note the change in the meeting place from that originally scheduled. Hamniondalre-Splnet Organ group members will not meet Fri day night as planned due to the death of Bert Atkinson. The next regular meeting will be the last of February. The Klamath District Garden Club board of directors will meet at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, February 1, in the social room of the Klam ath County Library. y ffff( vii t -WW. ft THE SCOTTISH RITE 15th degree cast, Klamath Falls, includes, front row. left to right, Sanford C. Selby, Louis Fritsch, Dennis Depuy, Dell Howe, John West, William With row, James D. Bush and Andrew Sullivan. Back row. same order, Carl Young, Gus Vla hos, Bert E. Miller, Ralph D. Jones, Robert D. Craig, Cecil Barkdoll, Walter Brown and Al Aldrich. LODGE OFFICERS , YREKA Officers advanced at the meeting of Siskiyou Court No. 100, Order of the Amaranth, Fri day evening, January 24, were Olive Young, royal matron, Lloyd Johnson, royal patron, and Ella Manning, advancing conductress. Installation of these officers will take place on March 31. The busi ness session was conducted by the present royal matron, Mary He- bard, and the royal patron, Don Dudley. Stock District Hearing Held Only slight comment was raised Wednesday morning when repre sentatives of the State Department of Agriculture held a public hear ing in the county court chambers for the purpose of receiving testi mony and evidence as to the exis tence of livestock districts in Klam ath County. Dave CamDbell was the o n 1 v Klamath County rancher testifying and sought clarification as to the responsibility of cattle raisers in open and closed range country. It was pointed out during the brief session that there are now 11 herd law districts in the county. They include Altamont, L a n g e 1 1 Valley, Gilchrist, Odell, Malin, Steward Lenox, Midland, Mt. Laki, Poe Valley, Algoma and Plevna. Also discussed was the. 1957 bill passed by the State Legislature which repeals all fence laws and stipulates that an adequate fence will be interpreted as one which meets the standards of the fences maintained by experienced ranch ers in the area being considered. The hearing was conducted by Chester B. Liechty of the animal husbandry division of the S t a t e Department of Agriculture. BPW Holds Dinner Meet DUNSMUIR - Personal legal problems were discussed by How ard Jones, attorney, in addressing the Dunsmuir Business and Pro fessional Women's Club at their January dinner meeting. Monday night, at the Travelers Hotel. This meeting was the celebration of the Dunsmuir club's 20th anni versary and Mrs. Grace Pickthorn gave a resume of the club's his tory. A report was given byHflau dine Adams on the district con ference in Red Bluff, including the legislative roundtable she attended. Signe Gilson, club president, was also a conlerence delegate. Mrs. Martin Schabacker intro duced young Kermit Sweetwyne who played the accordion. Daffo dils and pussy willows decorated the banquet tables. Husbands and inends of mem bers were guests at this event. The February business meeting will be on the evening of February 10 at the home of Aula Mazlum. Government To Release Red Scientific Documents GOP Leaders Map Campaign Washington " W Republican party leaders today begin charting their campaign to regain control of Congress in elections next fall. The 26-member Executive Com mittee of the GOP National Com mittee arranged to meet today preliminary to a full committee meeting tomorrow with President Eisenhower and . Vice President Nixon. . Both sessions are private. - The two-day, GOP conference will precede closed meetings Sat urday and Sunday by the Demo cratic Advisory Council. The coun cil will issue statements j dealing with the administration's foreign defense and economic policies. PHILADELPHIA tfi-The gov ernment has decided to let down all the bars and release for im mediate public use more than 50, 000 Soviet scientific documents a year, an authoritative source re vealed today. Every agency in the govern ment which now translates such Soviet literature has agreed to take part in the plan, he said. No longer will the documents be stamped 'secret' and left to gather dust in the tiles, he said. From now on, alt.this important scientific material is going to be distributed to the nations scien tists' just as fast ' as it can be handled." . ' The sharp reversal in govern ment policy was revealed . by a source close to the government who is here as a delegate to the conference of American Abstract ing and Indexing Services. He asked not to be further identified. The bulk of the Soviet literature will be made available by the Central Intelligence Agency and the Air Forces'. Air Information Division. The Air' For.ce set up its own intelligence agency to handle Soviet documents some years ago. It has been using the facilities The materiali to be released first is current literature which has been received and translated within the past year. A backlog estimated to contain hundreds of thousands ot documents will be re leased in small batches so the flood of literature doesn't swamp the country's scientists. Most of the material has been "secret" only insofar as this'coun try is concerned. All has been published openly in the Soviot Un ion, or in such European coun tries as East and West Germany and France. The source said the material had been stamped secret for three reasons security, because the agencies couldn't afford to pro duce enough copies, and because they couldn t afford the consid erable costs of distribution. Some of the documents, the source said, "undoubtedly . origi nated in this country, were trans lated into Russian by the Soviets, brought back to this country and translated back into English and then stamped secret. No final decision has yet been reached, the source said, on just how the mass of documents will he made available to the public. the abstracting and indexing agencies, the nation's major sci entific information services, were asked if they would like first crack at the material. The source said they were enthusiastic, but withheld a final decision on the question until later today. Court Hears Fund Report Members of the Klamath County Court were advised Wednesday that Klamath County now has $227, 000 in unappropriated allocations for the construction of federaL aid secondary roads within the coanty. The information from the state division of highways further indi cated that it will be expedient for the federal aid program if the FAS roads for Klamath County can be designated during 1958. As provided by law, the funds for the FAS projects are 60 -per cent lederal, 20 per cent state, and 20 per cent contributed from the county. Members of the court said that several roads are under considera tion for FAS application, including the five mile link road between Silver Lake and Klamath Falls. i k. is WW AND MELHAC STAINLESS STEE COMBINATION SERVICE for 8 53 PIECES M ELM AC DINNERWARE and 54 PIECES STAINLESS FLATWARE 5 NO MONEY DOWN ... 1.00 WEEK You'll be daliaM.d with f.moui break-roiiitant Matmae In lavtly "Dabonnire" pattern end Id. new "Marguerite" aajr Scandinavian design stainless steal, Perfecf for both caiual I ia isrmii enr. nomine, : IjrV MUM AC DINNIWMC INCLUDCS: ' W-tY I BlMtr Pletes v. 6 Cml lewta t So.cn Copt I larry Dliket ' .1 Moot Plotter m4 (mr 1 Seme lowt INCLUDES: Porta I Dour Spool I Mod Porta olf I luHor knife 1 Laril 1 Sorviee Pork 1 Service Spoon MH.MAC fUAlin MtiAMINI 701 MAIN STREET Store Houn 9:30 to 5:30 nEmw2MMl L ZfZ f I 'U I'll ALL NEW BUDGET MODEL ELECTRIC BLANKET FULL DOUBLE BED 72x84" SIZE . . FITS TWIN SIZE BED. 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