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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1958)
PAGE 4 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMAfH FALLS. ORfT.ON SUNDAY. 1 ' r f r. ? - --f -- -:..-:f .3 m ur tilw or me new experimental burner is shown here as it works in t field. Each pass covers a four-row width, and can cover 40 to 60 acres per day at a fuel cost of about $5 per acre. It operates at a speed of about five miles per hour. t Joint School Committee Pondering Four Bus Bids A mini cnhcnmmillna nf c-krml boards one and two was assigned pnnsidprnt inn nf fnur Kirfc fir a school bus which were opened dur ing a joint session October 13. Bids were received from the Schetky Kquipmcnt Corporation, Portland; Crown Coach and Truck Company. Mercer Island, Washing ton: Kdward L. KroDn Comnanv. Portland; and Juckeland Motors, Klamath Falls. Thev varied be tween $10. BOO. for a demonstrator, and $15,580. Final consideration by Sidewinders To Aid Allies WASHINGTON UPI This country will give 12 more Allied nations deadly Sidewinder missiles which outnumbered Chinese Na tionalist pilots have used recently to win dog fights over the For mosa Strait, officials said Friday. . ... . grouna noor, at Kiverside School 1fL U","'li:''! i" This action was taken due to The the suhonmmitlpp and aelinn t... the boards was postponed until the superintendent of schnnls and a school bus mechanic could inspect some oi tne models. Members of the subcommittee are Jake Rcn ie. Genroe Fliicraft .inhn Vnth W'yatt Padgett and Kollin Cantrall Other business considered in ioint session bv the hoards innlnHpn- making the decision that contract personnel missing the first, train ing, ween oi tne school year will receive 37-week, rather than is week, contracts. The hoards r-nncirlnrnrl a rnnlinn quarterly report of budget accounts, mm uueiii-u mai measures ne tan- to e hminate fire ha7ard m. ported by the fire marshal at Con ger ana Mamath Union High schools. The rennrteH ha7arnc m. lated to a furnace room door at Conger and a shavings collection at KU. At its senarate meeting, piemen. tary school board one authorized construction of an additional class room, in the central area nf Hip ground floor, at Riverside School nrrnRFR iq fitiiai 3 .i..i,ii;wwii fit tfitoiWilid ' ' '1X1 A i , ' IS "r get the supersonic missiles for i their planes are members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion. Since the successful use of the Sidewinder by Nationalist Chinese pilots, heavy demand has come from other nations among the 63 U.S. allies eligible to buy or re ceive IIS arms thn nffinialc coirl The nine-foot long, pencil-shaped Sidewinder blasts toward its target at twice the speed of sound, guided by an inlra-rcd "heat seek ing device. Fired against jets, it smashes into the plane's tail pipe and explodes. In its first actual halllp tp:t Ihp $.1,500 weapon has been credited with downing a number of Chinese Communist MIGs and substantial ly contributing to Chinese Nation alist air superiority in the For mosa Strait area. Officials said agreements al ready have been concluded to de liver the Sidewinders to 12 addi tional Allies in Europe and the Far Pavt imrlpr llin muliinl sistance program. They would not name the Allies ANOTHER VIEW of the new burner in operation is shown here, as it takes a four-row iwath" down a potato field. Burners may prove more efficient than beaters foe vine re moval with the added advantage of some degree of control over verticillium wilt. VERY HEAVY vine growth was burned off clean in this potato field of Scott Warren's Virgil Koehn, employe at the Klamath Experiment Station holds up a six toot length of vine prior to the burning operation. Rows on far right are those burned off with the new machine. New Potato Vine Burner Machine May Revolutionize Spud Harvesting Bv WAI T IKMIItl ILUSKI I,,.., I, i... i , u De Gaulle Set To Take Risk PARIS (tlPllPrpminr Tliarlpc de Gaulle may recruit candidates lor next month s parliamentary elections in Algeria among pro- rebel Moslems now imprisoned in French internment camps, in formed sources said Saturday. They said Ihe premier was ready to lake a calculated risk to avoid the election of Moslem yes-men who would be simolv puppets of Algeria's Flench set tlers. De Gaulle met with his rahinpt fnday for detailed talks. The cabinet shifted the date for the Algerian elections from the previously announced Nov. 23 to a three-day period beginning Nov. 28 in p VP ninrp nmp Inr pntnrppmnnt of l)e Gaulle's orders. Ill addition, it was reported the premier would make his filth visit to A epna par v nevl mnnlh in establish Ihe tone of Ihe elections. Ihe elections will send 70 dep uties from Algeria to the new Fifth Republic parliament here. De Gaulle has decreed that at least 45 of them must be Moslems. Accordinc to renorls. hp hones thai with Moslems actually repre senting the will of the Algerian masses he will be able to work out an clleclive end to the four-year- old war. heavy enrollment in grades three and four at the school. Board one took under advisement a letter Irom Councilman Walter Fleet, saying that the city was pre- narea In rnnnpratp in cnltinir nn student traffic patrols if requested to ao so by the board. The elementary board granted leaves nf ahspnee In atlonH nnn. fcrences during October to seven persons, ann debated the question Ot travel allowances within tho Hie. trict. It u-as riWirinH th-jl nDr,nn. nel at present receiving lump sum u avei payments snouid keep track oi ineir actua mi eaep unlil Kn vemher 1, when the results will be studied with a view to further action, ror niit.nf.riistrwt tro.-oi the board decided to use the same formula used hv ihe tatn fnr iic employes' travel. MrS. Rohert A Thnmn... Mrs. Mildred Rinnev upr. nnmL nated for the budget board by wyau l'aagett and Mrs. James L. Barnes, respectively. Final action W'ill be taken when thn thirt final nomination is made by Airs. iiara Aioore. CITY BRIEFS SttTO. V . i-t r,:,.. -X, -J7. I, . ' i' : J - ; .v'c,t'...; . It,' ' : ' 1 I ," f I j i f. THIS IS THE RIFLE RANGE where members of the police department's Junior Rifle Club will do their target practice and learn about rifle safety. Police Lt. Bud Adkins, in charge of the program, stands over a few of the .22 caliber rifles which will be used. Kegistrations tor the club open Monday. Story on Page 5A. ?r k, J.. vl 1 . r -; W LESTER OFFIELD CAP" COLLIER By w.m.t .ii:Miiti;,ii:wsKi A Woolerv Irailrr-inniinted burn r nnpi atllli1 .in an pvnnrimnnl :il basis in polaln lields this month was nescruied as the nottest thing in Klamath t ounty. The hurnor. shipped in by Kl.uu ath Polalo Growers Associ.ition, was demonsl rated by Supcrinlen dent t.ene Gross on Ihe exoernnenl station and in potato fields grown by W. W. Thompson, Lewis Kan- dra and Scnlt Warrrn Operaled at around he null KU To Host Art Class per hour, the burner cleared heavy, A Mahler burner than those dem run man ine neaiers do. onsir.iied mav prove more desir iil a furl cost of about $5 per acre able. Fail, pass covers a four-row width. ,(, slillks m, .,., Wlt ith favorahle wc.it her condi- spores. Leaving a section of stem Hons. Ihe burner might con or 40 might permit raking and burning 10 till acres lltT ri.1V and clear vines 'nt mnl cl -I IL' c I ( leaner Obituaries Woodcraft fSJpinhhnrc nf U'nnrf craft will meet October 20 at 8 p.m. in Ihe KC Hall when menu se lections maV he chnenn Tnr a hi-,!. day dinner. All members are asked lo attend. ML Laki Garden Cloh will meet on Monday. Octohpr 20 at 1.30 n.m. at the hnn-j. nf l.-c o,. car Rylander, 1403 Division Street Program wilt hp nn hulk, r..- . longer blnnmini. SPacnn anA Winninn unu sioring oi Duios. Kehpkah Knnlal rink at the IOOF Hall Monday, October -mi Hostesses will be Marie Kilgore and Elizaholh Shehi nrr..hmIi. will be served at 12:30. Card games win louow tne business meeting. Community Council will hnM its regular monthly meeling Mon- "rt.v noon at tne Winema Hnin Bill Decker will discuss his find ings enncprnina Ihp n.. fn. a .. "rcu ...I dll- ditional hospital facilities in thp ciiy. 'Cao' Collier Quits Post; Longtime Board Member Sneaker at BPW v a and a panel from the chamber of commerce will be present to dis cuss the measures on the Novem ber election h.-illnl at fhn nn,nk 20 dinner meeting of Ihe Business .iou i-ioiessionai women s Club at the Willard Hotel. Dinner will be served at fi:30 n m TalL-c m-o cd lor 7:30. Guests will hn i.pl. come. For reservations nhnne Mrs Alpha Phelps. TU 4-46!ll. Alfred D. Collier, a member of he Klamath Pnnntv Rnrinpt RnarH for vparc anH a mqn r,-arlilna with having an immense knowledge oi county government, has re sicned. Cap Collier submitted his resig nation to the county court, which aCCPnted it PriHaV with rnnrat A with Ihe observation that Collier's departure from county government would be a "great loss." The resienalinn nv.n. nr..n; zation of bolh the Budget Board and the County Board of Equaliza tion. Of Which Collier alcn was p member. Additionally thp rnurl .nnmmn r ndav new annninlmpntc tn tl.n toiuity Library Board making Ihe day one of extensive reorganization. The man nan-ind tn rnl.,nn 1 . ll(,lolc Iter on the Budget Board is Lester C". Ollield, manager of Ihe U.S. National Bank branch in Klam ath Falls. Hp will rill tn... Piling January 1, lo. Collier said in his brief letter Ol resignation llP Was rnuianinn k cause creation of the Oregon Stale Logging Museum at Collier Slate Park and thp pvnanrfint. nn.,M of the Slate Parks Advisory Board are taking "more time than I am presently able to give them." "-omcr state Park was named hlll'ns When .-nmhiima Willi loot stalk eliminalnr .ula. h. menls lo combine enumiiient nii,.l.t offer the most wilt control. Mayor Urges United Front Mor- , Irom l.iiiin or more acres in one . season Ihe burner rir clous a umv i.m Maine which Unites the drv vm, growth Murium; continues lor sev minutes alter icinhon Inn. nm only ashes and a lew shorl sluh The burn is vnnfined niniiv w,.u lo Hie area ctnered bv Ihe ma chine YerV Illtlp sni'Pa.lmi. ..I fir., in adjacent rows was observed The burner is "the hottest idea' i.. ,.. - , . i Hrilliim. u.u ..i.i.-i. t. .1 Dl'NSMl'IU - Mavor .1. - .o.v.i I.-. uu- Mill .... . .. borne lungiis diseaso rMi ,,,. aone.s urgra iiunsmuir resi f.nrollmenis are si ill being ac cepted for two general extension division courses that are ollered at Klamath Lmon High School on Mondays liom 7 to '.MS p 111. A course m drawing (allied arls 2!ll) is being ollered 111 Hnom :i2.i. Howard Hall of Ihe Ki lls staff is Ihe insinicioi . Two hours ol low er division college credit may be obtained and 11 is possible to take this course a second or third lime s manv as a million for crcflit. up 10 a loial ot sin form in a single stem. Some soil nours. 1 ne umise includes worKarry a million spores per tea 111 u,....lllK l.lllll.UV5 aiUlspt)(in( ,l( 0.11 lh lllllOUUvi-n mi: ntiniiiii m u - ber of new met hods. Figure draw ing is emphasized. A rnurse 111 histotv nl Aincii.-an education (education .W1 is ollercd -in Room 30ii. (ierald O. Cannon' assistant orofesvor of Iradp and in. dustrial edm-i n nl Oregon Slalei HLlil.IN il l'p Comiiuinisi College. 1 tne instructor. The police held National Hrnadcasting course offers three hours ol credit To tcleviMon director John Such- to persons with graduate standing ;rur and two German rameiamrii "(' named liohcrl Prwe, north in' education. It traces Ihe mlel-iloi Ihicc hours Weduo-1l.1v 1! Dunsmuir iironertv owner and Henlev Belhel Vn ?i rnt. national Order of .lob's Daughters, will meet ai 7 ::n n m Ni,.na.. Oclober 20. in Ihe Henley' Grange tiall. Kcmember to take from candy sales. monev OK FY L AK F V I FW Larry Duane Orev. 14. died in Lakeview lliisnil.il on Salurdav . mnrnine aller a hnef illness. He was Ihe only son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Orev of Lakeview. His lather is a Slate llinhwav Denarlment .siiniM-inten- dent. The boy was born on January IK. M-H. ,11 Whuiier, California, and the familv had moved from Bend to Lake iew about a vear ago. He was a sophomore at Lake- view High School. In addition to hie narenls snr.i vivors include two grandmothers.! Visiinn Mr and Mic n,mia mis. tiaie Mancock ot .Millnn - Balm. 2-year-old daughter Debbie Freewaler and Mrs. Mildred Pris. ,tnH 9.n-nntl..nia ..r. 1 sell ol Lakeview. been guests of relatives and friends The Ouslev-Osterman Funeral It.-ilin ic a nitnt f., v-,t . Home will forward Ihe body toiOrient Airlines. He is a graduate Ntswonser-Winslow Mortuary at! of Henlev Hieh School and sen-nrf in tne U.S. Air force before going into private flying. in honor of Collier and his broth er, A. iM. Collier.) Collier's resignation letter to the court also observed: "You and your predecessors have asked me to serve on your Budget Board for approximately 25 years past. I thank you for this continued opportunity to serve the people of Klamath Countv. II is saiisfvinn to have Klamath County free oi bonded debt and nrotesled war rants and on a sound financial basis. May it stay Funeral lance The Order of Hainhovv lor Girls, Assembly No. 57. will Hold Hs annual formal Oclober 25 at the Yacht Club from 8:30 tti 1 :30 nm Thn Ihnmn tt.i win be Oriental Gardens. The pub lic is invited Programs will be on ale nest Wednesday. ANDERSON David Rid"0W3V Andnt-snn Ttl .native of Ohio, resident of Ore-iZ "S"K-JL cs.cma'lvc 0 It 13 vnarc Jini n ,,' Pfcl UIUII .11 CCOnOll.y. v-oiiier was chairman of the Budget Board, which now must the county was losing the services oi a man whose resnect is state- wide. "He knows more ahnnt pmm. ty government than anybody in t ie State nf Orettnn that'c what T think, Mack said. AS nrPSidPnt nf Ihp Swan T qI-p Moulding Company, Collier's posi tion on the Budget Board contrib uted to a balance of interests which the cnunfv rnurl strivpc tn main tain in its membership. .viacK said n was Ihe court s feeling that Offield's appointment tO tllC OOen nOSitinn WmilH nnnlinnn that balance. Olfield is a native of Malin, a man experienced in gov ernmental practices, and an in formed renresenlalivp nf k'lamtl. Falls. "We are fortunate to get his services," Mack observed. Olher members of the Budget Board arG R. P Kllinctnn n( U'l-i.vi i alh Falls, .representing timber as one ot tne county s major inter ests, and Frank W. Brown nf Langell Valley, a representative of School Chief Relates Woes DUNSMUIR - Classroom and class loads will be the problem next year, Roger Ellis, principal of Dunsmuir Elementary School, told the board of trustees at their October meeting. He staled enrollment had reached 6K6 already this year and every room in the two buildings had been put into use. He called altention to the influx of students due to highway construction and that three additional highway projects would get underway in the vicinity next year. The board was asked to consider addiniT nnp fir twn tnanhnrc tn tlia staff next year and finding rental space lor additional classrooms. "It is either that or put some erodes on a dnnhlp shift " Filia said. Kindergarten classes are at ra. pacity, Ellis said, and the two sixth grades have 37 pupils each. Fifth grade enrollment is 75 stu dents. The board asked Ellis to get State aSSistanCP in PnnsiHarinff tl.p purchase of a future school site while undeveloped areas that meet slate requirements are still avail able. Voters defeated a bond isue lo erect a new school last year. In other business, the board went on record opposing the passage of Proposition 17. nntinn- it wn,,M a. crease general state revenue and mereiore mean a reduction in state support of schools. They voted to resume releasp limn fn.- rpiinin,.e education for four one-hour periods per month and authorized the use of Ihe building for adult education Slav SO. . . ....6 ,ui nvuiiL cuucdlion County Judge Charlie Mack said I.- cos.,s 10 be met from "gis- i- . .... . irai nn tppc Rend where funeral services will he held early this week followed by interment in Greenwood Ceme tery at Bend. mature mp Hpath I ileitis to form a "united front Verlicllium is a .,,avp ' ,,.Vm,m, s ,lws concerning disease, lt is not seriou. nil spore "lin''""'r interchanges and population builds un lo very Uh r?' Proposed by the slate levels in soil. ' division nl highways in their pio- .... gram io maKe Ills hwav .)!) a im- l ie snores inrni in (kii.. ,.t ...j - . 1 , . ' . , 'i m o access ireewav. i,,,.-.i i..,,in,c iu;.,7 i !" cnueos commiiiee at the coun- ... ... .,,,. i,,,.,,,!,, Wednesday nii-ht lip! .. . ........I. t.,1.1 if HSLr- I hp i-itmmt!lpp tn a..,.ian the highway plan is ' u.,a ,t i. ... , , ...... ii inn. ..it., i . uu i:r Sim he nnmnsed P.- ti i51''1 "n tnro engines millee to deride u-h-n thn nn... None pf ,l,c 1" Persons v.ni.i. i. .k ... i Hon would best suit the needs oft : l . 1 "orKers mslallmg culverts along . . . . he comnionilv I ... ........ ''.'h . uu ini- win. ilie;ivily llllesIlMt. Premature vine death reduce Me and yield oi potatoes. an turn In the soil Navy TransDort Lands Safely SHANNON. Ireland U'PD A U.S. Navy transnnrl with nno nf its four engines burned out land ed Safely ai the hit? Inlpt-n.-itinna! , ,, ,i.,; in pen m-iT cany .-.aiuroay alter anepl.ible n , . n .. . Meeling A regular business meeting of OTI Chapter No. 3B will he he d at 7:30 n.m Tups. day in the Student Union Lounge on the OTI campus. gon lor the past 13 years died here October 17, I!I58. Survivors include Ihe Widnw M-,Pil.n r Klamath Falls: daughters, Francis Page. Prineville. Oregon and Ar louine Wise. Ft. Wayne. Indiana sons, William Baltimore, Mary land, Dale. Hoagland. Indiana, Charles and Robert of Klamath Falls, Farl, Benton Ridge. Ohio half brother Will .v,,a.,r.., .-, ford, Ohio: sister. Mary Good Macon, .Michigan, and nine grand children. Services will be held from the chanel of Ward- k-i.,.v. 'ath Funeral Home. Monday. Octo ber 20 at 1:30 p.m. Bishop Wes ley Clark nf Ihp rhnmh nf w. Christ of Latter Day Saints offi ciating. Interment to follow in rinley. Ohio at a later dale. Ward's Klamath Funeral Home in charge of arrangements SPLIT OVER MOLOTOV LONDON IUPU Thn hanlch. ment of former Soviet Foreign Minister Vvachslav t ii.... from Moscow has "threatened a major split" bclween Russia and Communist China, the London Daily Mail reported Saturday. A Moscow dispatch to the Mail said Chinese leader Mao Tse-tung tn rarhnn d nv.rfe treatninn, Thpl""""1 -0V back among the ouMcfammon Wonderlich Company ! p"L"n iJ?.? bm. S1 ,.n;..- .. i - . v.Mi. . ..mllrt rvnrusncnpv won't have him PIPE FIRE DUNSMUIR The nuntmiiit- Volunteer Fire Department was called to put out a "pipe" fire Thursday afternoon. It was quite smoking pipe but it responded si-jthe Ireewav right-of-way accident- TV DlltFCTOIl IIKI.I) ed hv Ihe stale I,.- a hi,n h.,..- nc P'anc "JW outboard ally ignited asohall coatinc of ing on Ihe evening of October "7, c'?."u',,. , , huge pipe Alter exhausting their at the citv hall are described bv'.. , on thf a-v ,rom 'heown fire extinguisher, they called the stale 'as "long r.in-e plans " i 1 ""l'd N.aios ,NorwaV " 'lk('!""' ''IP- was about hallway here from Ihe US h.tse at Argentina. Nfht. the engine caught fire choose a successor tn that nncitinn Kllinesnn was named tn rpt.li.p Collier on the Board of Equaliza tion, also a three-member hoard Mack is the countv court's renrp. sentative, and a third member is selected each year. The selection is evnp.'tpd wi because the board meets again No vember 3 to study the ratio he tween actual and assessed valua tions of Dronerlv brpsentrri hv thr rnnnlv accnccnp ine cnange in Ihe library board occurred with the resignation of two members. Chairman Gilbert Fleet and Andy Strppt Finn! cm. ceeded his father, the late Fred Fleet, a longtime board chairman. Street is a retired Malin schnnl principal. A. R. Dickson ol Klamath Falls was named temporary chairman of the board with the ondprstanrtinn he would call a meeting when of- ncers win ne elected. He w a s named to a four-year term. Dick son, Claudia Lorenz of Chiloquin (two-vear terml and NtillrnH I Campbell of Bonanza 'one - year termi arc members of the "old board retained on the new. New appointees are Beulah Elliott of Kiamath Falls 'three vearsi and Ted A. De.Merritt of Malin. four years . All development ol norlh Puns-' miiir will he held in abeyance un to tl, U .J '" "" ws access , mads are built, Jones declared lectual deveiopmeiu ol America w is ri-.ried Friday night. The head of the planning commission w ith special relet once In education Mtc o::u e here said Ihe nu-n chau man of Ihe committee Cum Persons inieresicu inrniouing :n wen- p isitt up while photograph- muter members a.c J-Hlge either of these coiuses should at- irn: F.i-i Berlin scene- for a trie- Smith. Sill Muiohv Paul Mcouffe tend the Monday, October 20, class :.i-ion shew and were tclcased Jim t ,ni.:t. Francis Mcl nerncv' meeling. n quc-uoning ,;1dd!e and Armani! UrarM PERSONALIZED Qrrpshnu Canis CSri-r Mw! Ht wpici tumf 2t WANTED Bmurj Operator hlam Peart lawty 111 ). 9th TW S1I fCk Vote For R. R. (Bob) Walker VlV V I DcmocroHe Candidol-e For d County Commissioner - f IiV fJ ' wo,' mo'e ou own K'om- Lui Simati ath "-oun,V No. 1 in Oreqon. 27 n.t, rr.n., luccesjTuI business veon and 4 ' veon mayor or Merrill. ..ifT.r . - .j.jrji i . - - i Ballot Talk to Be Heard YRFk'A ll.l d.. .j ... ...n. n lliaivilldu dim Joe Correia Iwn Vmi. nttr will be nrpspnl al thp nnv. meeting of the Yreka Business and Professional Wnmnn-e ri..k disclosed by program chairman. La Jean Correia, during the club's recent business meeting in the Yre ka Inn with Ihp nn.:a.. ... , j.. i.iiuun, ails. Hachcl Cordes, presiding. ine speaker s subject matter will be devoted to discussing Ihe var ious nrnnntifinnc nnnnnn; 11.. .. , ' "I't'sni uitj Ull UIB November 4 ballot. The dinner daie, formerly set lor Tuesday ev ening. October" 28, has been set ahpari nnp a..., t r.-,... .... uflj iu uuir her 27. as Ihe Siskiyou Cnnimiin. ity Concerts have scheduled the October 28 dale for the first con cert of the .'all season. During Tuesday evening's meet ins, the Huh alsn rWiaa In .-. tend invitations to all women's and mCn'S Clllhs and nrnnniotinnr !p attend the dinner event. Members ol the BPWC will also invite their husbands as guests. The dinner mCCtinC Will lake nlann at th Yreka Inn, and Mrs. Cordes ex pressed the hope that there would be 100 per cent attendance by the members and their cuesls. Welcome Wigon Hostess Will Knock on Vour Door with Gifts & Greetings from tYiendly Business, Neighbors and Your Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Engagement . Announcements Arrival ot Newcomers to Klamath Fall ' N rosf o' onliixtienl