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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1958)
THURSDAY. JUNE 2fi. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE 3 A CITY BRIEFS New Operator Blanche Daniels, former operator with Houston's Beauty Salon and Ada's Beauty Shop, is now with the Star Beauty Shop, owned by Mrs. Jack Uane'i Marsh in the Stevens Hotel. A Coffee and fellowship hour will follow the morning worship service at Peace Memorial Pres byterian Church. Sunday. June 29. The hour is being sponsored by the Mariners in honor of church families who are moving from this community. Friday Circles of Peace Me morial Presbyterian Church will meet Friday, June 27 as follows: Forsythe, 9 a.m.. at the home of Mrs. Laveretta Moore. 4255 Frieda Street; MacKenzie at 12:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Arlene Good ing on the Lakeview Highway. Visitor Mrs. Ben Clark, Cass ville, Missouri, has been the guest of her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Antle. Awards Paul Kindsvatcr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kindsvater. 79 Lincoln Street, was among more tnan no students at Linfield Col lege, Mc.Minnville, who received awards for their activities and work in the speech and drama de partments at Linlield during the past college year. Kindsvater re ceived his second year award in speech and first year recognition in acting. Organizing .Meeting A group of retired federal civil service em ployes is holding a meeting Satur day afternoon at 2 o'clock in the tounty library, with the intention of forming a local chapter of the National Association of Retired .Civil Employes. All retired civil service employes are invited to at tend. Merry Misers Square Dance Friday. June 27, at 8 p.m. at the South Sixth Community Hall. Bill Mayhew calling. Ladies please bring doughnuts or pastry. Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Hines, 528 Owens Street, returned on Wednesday afternoon from an extended visit with relatives and friends in Oklahoma, Texas and Arkansas. Food Sale Bethel No. 61 Inter national Order of Job's Daughters will hold a baked food sale at the Bon Bazaar on Saturday, June 28, starting at 9 a.m. Mt. Laki Garden Club will meet Monday. June 30, at 11 a.m. at the residence of Mrs. T. B. Wat ters, 1217 Pacific Terrace, for a tour of gardens. A picnic lunch will take place at Moore Park at noon, which will be followed by tne regular business meeting. Supper A waffle and sausage supper will be served from 5 to 6 o'clock Friday. June 27, in the annex of tha-RLDS Church on the corner of Ninth and Plum streets. Tickets are 75 cents for adults and 50 cents for children under 10. On Leave A.l.C. Edward G.' Rae, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Tlackus, 2210 Ogden Street, is home on a 30-day leave from Lor ing Air Force Base, Limestone. Maine. He has as his houseguest A.3.C. George Camp, of Georgia, who is also stationed at Loring. Both are with the Eighth Air Force, Strategic Air Command. Home Diane Oldham, 5236 Har land Drive has returned home af ter attending weddings of sorority sisters in Salem and Coos Bay. She is a merrier of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and is a June graduate of the University of Ore- gon School of Business. Her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Oldham, and brothers, Gene and Shannon, all of this city were present in Eu gene for commencement. Physical Activity Builds Heart Protection Says MD By RENN1E TAYLOR AP Science Reporter SAN FRANCISCO (API It's a long life of physical activity, not the few years of exercise by the a'hlete, that builds up protection against coronary attacks, a Uni versity of Kentucky doctor said today. All three components of the jging process decline in effi ciency, decline in physique and decline in health are slaved otf hy sustained physical activity. Dr. Ernest Jokl told the American Medical Assn. Plane Averts Air Tragedy ST. LOUIS AP An American Airlines plane with 44 persons aboard and a Navy plane nar rowly missed a collision 500 feet above Municipal Airport yester day. The airliner, piloted by Capt Ted Kasper of Grapevine, Tex. had just taken otf for Dallas when the Navy AD6 swooped out of the 1,000-foot ceiling. The Navy plane passed above the DC7. Lt. E. V. Thomas, pilot of the Navy plane, said he turned away quickly when he saw the DC7. He said he had been unable to contact the control tower by radio because bad weather had jammed communications. The weather had also prevented Thomas, flying in from Norfolk, Va., from landing at Scott Air Force Base near Belleville, 111., his original destination. The DC7 continued on to Dallas. Its first oflicer, Kenneth Phelps, Irving, Tex., told a newsman: "It was coming straight at us from about a 45-degree ancle. I shouted, Level off, Ted, there's a plane out there.' He did. It wasn't enough. I grabbed the con trol column and pushed the plane down. "The other plane passed about 50 feet over our tail. We leveled off, then began climbing again. "I don't think the passengers felt a thine." ivaspcr saia ne aia not see tne Navy plane and added, "It s good thing Ken did." 'An exercise regimen that con fines itself to a few years of in tensive training as usually ad hered to hy competitive athletes will not thus be effective," he aid. The health significance of long time physical activity as contrast ed with the exercise quota of the athlete came out. Dr. Jokl said in studies made of lumberjacks :n Finland, unskilled manual la borers in Great Britain, long term members of German gym nastic clubs, and mountain guides m Switzerland. Dr. Jokl said they showed that men 60 years old who have stayed with physical activity perform better in athletics or in their vo cations than untrained men of 30. Three British scientific papers and one German research report have shown, he added, that heart and artery disease is much lower in the physically active than in the sedentary individual. In other papers surgeons re ported new progress in coronary operations. Dr. Arthur Vineberg of Mon treal and Dr. James H. Walker of Charleston. W. Va.. said studies in both dogs and humans had lemonstratcd the usefulness of re- outing an artery from the chest and piping it into the heart mus cle to give extra blood supply. This artery normally supplies the breast area. But the breast can get along with other arteries if this one is taken away. Dr. Vineberg and Dr. Walker re ported on 107 such operations on coronary patients. Twenty-four of these patients came too late and were little ben efited, they snid. Bus of the re maining 83 patients, 58 returned to work after the operation. In eight years the mortality rate among them has been 17 per cent Beatty Rodeo Tells Plans Beatty Rodeo Association an nounces its annual July 4-5 rodeo this year is expected to be better than ever. The event, highlighted by a bar becue of venison, prizes and other attractions, will get under way July 4 at 1:30 p.m. at the Beatty Fair grounds. Top local and out-of-area riders will participate in bronc, bareback and bull riding for top prize mon ey. Three roping events will also be held daily. The barbecue feed will take place right after the rodeo events on the Fourth at the camp grounds in Beatty. Indian stick games. dancing and other entertainment will be featured. Auto accessories and other items yet to be selected will be given away as gate prizes. Admission prices are $1 for adults and 50 cents for children over 12. Children under 12 will be admitted free. Rodeo nders must sign up at Beatty Tavern by midnight July 3. Weather Table By United Press International Temperatures and rainfall for ADVOCATES FOREIGN MISSION BOSTON, Mass. (UPD A mis cionary official Wednesday night urged American members of the United Church of Christ to give greater support to the expansion of foreign missions. Miss Mar garet R. Blemker of Boston, sec retary for Europe and the Near East of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Mis sions told delegates to the bien nial meeting of the General Coun cil of the Congregational Christian Churches that the hope of the modern world is in developing thinking, feeling, believing men who can understand world prob lems and make decisions for themselves. 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. High Low Rain Albuquerque 83 58 Atlanta 89 73 Boise 74 60 Boston 82 63 Browsnville 94 77 Chicago 69 56 .11 Denver 55 45 .03 Detroit 71 53 .78 El Centro ' 107 Fairbanks 71-53 Fort Worth !)3 62 T. Fresno 93 64 Helena 73 46 Kansas City 68 53 Los Angeles 84 68 Miami 86 79 .97 Minneapolis 64 54 New Orleans 91 77 .08 New York 78 68 Oakland 89 59 Oklahoma City 74 50 .23 Phoenix 107 76 Pittsburgh 83 56 .37 Red Bluff 96 66 Reno 83 48 Sacramento 98 64 Salt Lake City 82 53 San Diego 73 63 San Francisco 82 58 T. Seattle 71 56 Spokane . 73 55 Stockton 97 64 Thermal 109 77 Tucson 105 73 Washington 87 74 Country Set For U.S. Loan WASHINGTON (API-Addition al U. S. loans for the economic development of neutral Afghani stan appeared assured today as Prime Minister Sardar Moham med Daud neared the end of an official visit with President Eisen hower. A joint statement is to be issued before Daud's departure tomorrow on a 12-day tour of the United States. It is expected to announce n long-term U. S. loan and affirm the two countries' desire for world peace. Daud is known to have asked the United States for further help in developing the Helmand Valley in southern Afghanistan. Some 40 million dollars in U. S. credits have already been expended on his project, designed to irrigate a million acres of land. Afghan officials say lack of funds has cut this objective sharp ly. They estimate it would cost an additional loo million dollars to complete the project. The U. S. loans are expected to total about a fourth of that amount. They would be drawn from Eisenhower's Asian develop ment fund. - J- 5 Lad Named State Head SACRAMENTO (AP)-Tim Orr, 15-year-old high school junior from Lancaster, was inaugurated today as governor of the 1958 Cali fornia Boys State in a ceremony at the Capitol. Orr won the gubernatorial con test over Robert M. Uhl, 17, of San Francisco, yesterday, 484-337. The Boys Stale treasurer is stocks and bonds expert Leonard Ross, the 12-year-old from Tu- junga who won $164,000 on tele vision quiz shows last year. He won handily from Charles Ham son of Covina, 543-273. The closest contest in the week- long model state sponsored by the American Legion was in the at torney general race, where Horace McNally of Beverly Hills won by three votes over Alfred T. Smith of San Diego. The count was 407-404. Daniel Lund, Culver City, is the lieutenant governor. He defeated Dan Avey of Whittier, 613-203. Other results: Secretary of state James Shanklin. Vallejo, 526: Gary Lit tle, Kedondo Beach, 285. Controller Stanley Sanders, Perris. 453; Makoto Nakayama, Los Angeles, 354. Superintendent of public instruc tion Gary North, Manhattan Beach, 540; Ken Posey, Redlands, 263. CHARLES E. MARTIN OTI Teacher To Be Feted On Sunday, June 29. at Phila delphia, Charles E. Martin, M T. head instructor in medical tech nology at Oregon Technical In stitute. will received the Distin guished Achievement Award of the American Medical Technologists for 1938 for outstanding service in the held of medical technology. The occasion will be the group's national convention. Martin retired from the Navy after serving 30 years in the hos pital corps. During that time he taught at the old Naval Medical School in Washington. D.C., and later at the United States Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Mary land, serving as chief of the floor in this activity. His teaching experience dates back to 1923. starting at the sta tion lahoratory at Hampton Roads. Virginia, where he was stationed for four years before going to the medical school in Washington for 14 years. He also served at t h e base hospital in New Hebrides for two years, Naval Base Hospital No. 156. Guadalcanal for two years and has been with the OTI staff for the last 10 years. Martin is part-time supervisor of three laboratories under Dr. G. R Nicholson, clinical pathologist. He is registered with the American Medical Technologists and the American Society of Clinical Path ologists. In addition, he holds an associate fellowship in the Ameri can College of Medical Technol ogy and is a member of the Ore gon Vocation Association and the American Vocation Society. Former Basin Man Honored William Frohnmayer, formerly of Klamath Falls, now a Medford realtor and 1957 president of the Medford Realty Board, has been appointed to the State Real Estate Board hy Gov. Robert D. Holmes. Frohnmayer, an Oregon native who has been in the real estate business in Medford since 1950. succeeds E. M. Chilcote, Klamath Falls, on the five-man board which conducts examinations for appli cants for brokers' and salesmen's licenses. His appointment runs un til June 14, 1W2. Frohnmayer, who was recently elected treasurer of the Jackson County Democratic Central Com mittee, has. been active in Medford civic affairs and fund drives, and was with the Commercial Finance Company-there from 1933 to 1938 After 10 years with the same firm in Klamath Falls he returned to Medford to enter the real estate business. He is a member of the Oregon Association of Real Estate Boards and the National Asociation. He served as secretary-treasurer of the Medford Multiple Listing Scrv ice in 1956, and is presently on the executive board of both the Medford Realty Board and the listing service. MENTALLY RETARDED The Oregon Association for Re tarded Children advises all men tally retarded adults who have worked at least five years in em ployment covered by social se curity but now are unable, due to their disability, to work in sub stantial employment should con tact their social security district office before June 30, 1958, to pro tect against potential loss of ben efits and to establish a disability freeze. Group To Call Interim Heads ST. LOUIS (AP Some Team sters Union officials in St. Louis have been subpoenaed to appear hetore the h.b. benato Hackets Committee. Names of those subpoenaed were not disclosed but some of them were officials of Local 447, the carnival workers local. Gibbons was elected to the post in January by six votes. Included in the final court were the seven votes of the carnival workers. Louis D. Shoulders, former St, Louis cab driver, is also under subpoena. He is the son of Louis Shoulders, fromer St. Louis police lieutenant who served a prison term for perjury in the missing urecnlease ransom money case, On The Record KLAMATH FALLS MARRIAGE LICENSER Jnmen Stanley Pade, 42, and Huby L. Valentine, 40 Leroy Lloyd Porter. 22, Tdahn Falls. Idaho, and Eunice Marie Welman. 20, Klamath Falls. KLAMATH FALLS BIRTHS (IRLS BADGER Born to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Badger June 23 In Klamath Valley Hospital a girl weighing 6 lbs.. 11 ou. BOYS HESS Born to Mr. and Mn. Fred G. Hess June ,23 in Klamath Valley Hospital a boy weighing 7 lbs., ll'a OZK. TILLEY BOrn tn Mr. and Mrs. Ce cil A. TUley June 23 in Klamath Val ley Hospital a boy weighing 7 lbs.. t -ZS. T ALLEY Born tn Mr. and Mrs. Al bert Tallcy June 24 in Klamath Val ley Hospital a boy weighing 6 lbs. Girls 230 Boys 250 Hail has forced some U.S. towns to Ret their snow plows out in the middle of spring and summer to clear streets. RONALD C. STERLAND Ex-Resident Wins Degree Ronald C. Sterland. former Klamath Falls man, received his bachelor of arts degree from West ern Washington College of Educa-! Hon, Bellingham, Washington. Present for his commencement on June 13 were his parents, Mr. and .Mrs. c. T. Sterland of this city. Sterland, a 11150 graduate of Klamath Union High School, will teach band, orchestra and chorus in the junior high school at Custer, Washington. He spent two years at Pacific Lutheran College, Park land. Washington, and four years in the Navy with the Sixth Fleet Band. .Mr. and Mrs. Sterland and their young son Mark brought the sen ior Sterlands home. California Weather By I'niled Preu International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair and cooler through Friday except high fog near ocean extending in land during morning: high today San Francisco 65, Oakland 72, San .Mateo 76. San Rafael 80: low to nignt 55-60: westerly winds slight ly above normal. Northern California: Fair through Friday except coastal fog. cooler central coast and Stockton northward today and tonight; slightly cooler Sierra Nevada and Sar Joaquin Valley Friday; coast al winds northwest 12-25 m.p.h. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Fair today and tonight becoming partly cloudy Friday; cooler today and tonight. Sacramento Valley: Fair through Friday: cooler today and tonight; high both days 80-90; low tonight 54-62: southerly winds 8-16 m.p.h. Northwestern California: Fair through Friday except fog near coast extending inland in morning; cooler inland today and slightly cooler tonight; partly cloudy extreme north Friday; high today and low tonight Ukiah 84-52, Santa Rosa 85-53, Napa 85 54; northwest winds 12-23 m.p.h. near coast. J! For More III Living Per Gallon See the New M0RRIS '1000' Robin & Myers IIJJ 1200 E. Main TU 2-5511 tidafu BEAUTY SALON TOWN & COUNTRY Coll TU 2-S671 or drop in. Eve nings by appointment . Al ways the best. "" N Better get ;' . 00 Jl i 'i one 8 never mh 2 cartona. enouf -fxf1 CRAPE. Pure, wholesome, natu ) CANADAl rally alive with sparkling flavor. rDRYiJ. King-Size in 6 bottle cartons. WaeWt Only Mly AwtMMittt Ceaner ELECTROLUX Oo.EcvfOujx com fettoryAvtrwriivtf Serf orW StMct TARKEL TWEET Ph. 4-7167 2550 White St. Welcome Wagon Hostess Will Knock on Your Door with Gifts & Greetings from Friendly Business, Neighbors and Your Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Engagement Announcements AriOal of Newcomers to Klamath Falls Ne cost or obligation! ' Pht TU 4-6185 Hfl 32b M Gcrj eras 13? mm SIX DAY SALE STANDARD QUALITY VtlV' ONLY 5.00 DOWN! SAVE OVER Va! Mi WANTED rniniK AVAILABLE rm4 iv;1 m4 Sfandard Weight Room BUILT-IN liONED SEALED FOR ; AN ABILITY uum. 1-ioof m.wh ,neluaM " d minimum. lrTSTm 'T .Z, fW floor rep-ic, YMMi 51,q j Inboard. 1 CAMOIK bathroom HARMONY HOUSE OtIAt ITY OTWfLt BOOM SIXES LOOK AT THI SAVINGS! IIZE lALEPRICi m.t ti u s 11 o till SIZE SALE PRICE 12X10 $41.88 12X12 47.88 12X11 52.88 12X13 59.88 133 So. Eiqhth Phone TU 2-4481 Shop Fridays 'Til 9 p.m. xr 1 r