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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1959)
o o O PAGE 4 B HMT,D AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON' o Sffir 'jGround Crew hnds Bodies Dot ewnen hi Klamath County are reminded that the deadline for buying 1W9 licenses it near. Bill Schlegel, county poundmas ter. in warning ol the deadline stated that an approximate 4.ooo canines in the county are without this year's tags. Since the March Soy optimist? To Ketrr Review A review of the book. "The Hid den Persuaders." will be given by Mrs. Victor E. O'Neill as the program for this week's meeting l the Klamath Falls Soroptimisl 1 deadline falls rm Sunday, tans m,Cs northwest ol here VANCOUVER. B. C. 'API A iround party recovered five bod ies Tuesday from the twUtcdiClub. wreckage of a light plane which The previously scheduled talk by crashed Monday in mountainous Carrol Howe, Klamath County su- terram on Redonda Island, loo'perintendent of schools, on current may be purchased at the county Four of the victims were identi- .7 TV- - L7 Hied as A. L. I.yttle. 41. owner of '"T: " .aZ, the Ce.ssna 180 four-seater and day. March 2. without the ddedprc,.idMrt of ,u(nber cornpan. - v " j at .North Vancouver, Bert Wooid i ne enure county is ro oe comrea for unlicensed dogs this year, Schlegel said, and unlicensed dogs will be picked up. Requests for tags have been slow in coming in. Anyone unable to go in person to the county clerk's office or to the dog pound, may mail a check to either place with a description of the dog being tagged. Licenses are $1 for males, $2 for spayed females and $3 for females. Atomic Energy Scientist Says State Fallout Low legislation relating to education, was canceled because of the speak- area. "We've things." chief of the radiation branch of the Atomic er s absence from Klamath Falls. The luncheon meeting will start at noon in the Camas Room of the Wincma Hotel on Thursday. ridge, a camp superintendent .Members may bring guests from Courtenay, B. C, his son Harry Wooldridge and a son-in-law. Larry Sinclair, both 23. The looked Kenneth at L. identity of the filth man was not immediately established. The Cessna crashed on a 35 mile flight from Comox on Van couver Island to a logging camp at Redonda Island. Air searchers spotted the wreckage at the 1 .500 foot level of a mountain. ' ! RICHLAND. Wash. 'AP An Dunham said the F.nglishman was Atomic Energy Commission scien- apparently referring to a stronti tist says no "freak concentre- nn content standard that was tions" of radioactive strontium "totally irrelevant" and that "av fallout have shown up in the years craging things out oer a period of monitoring carried on in this of time, there is no reason to think that anyone is getting excessive a lot of amounts of strontium in their England, .diet" from wheat or any other sciences source. Energy England said here he was at a Commission's Hanford operations, conference at Washington, D. C. The book, according to Mrs.lsaid Wednesday. last week at which Dr. Dunham O'Neill, takes up the subjects of. "But the state of Washington is discussed the situation, merchandising and advertising very, very low in the scale, al- Dr. Dunham said at Washington from the angle of psychology and though maybe a little above the that the AEC. at the request of presents reasons lor prelcrcncesi national background. Even in Minnesota state oflicials, recent times of heavy atomic testing, the ly analyzed 23 samples of Minne fallout is pretty well diluted down rota wheat for strontium content by the time it reaches us." iThey represented wheat grown in F.nsland commented on a com- 1936. 1937 and 19o8 in six Minne plaint' made before the British in purchasing in an amusing vein. Jl'RV PANEL DORR IS A Jury panel of 31 pesirinnts of the Dorris .Indicia! District has been summoned to I Parliament Tuesday appear before Judge Les Chase Thursday morning al 10 o'clock in the courtroom in Dorris, for the trial of Wilburn E. ' Rill I ("rites 40-Club bartender, charged with Britain. an alleged cash payoff from a pin- The statement by Konni Zillia- ball machine, to a deputy sheriff, cus, English Labor Party member. sota counties and only one of the can wheat had been so contain' inated by strontium fallout from atomic tests that the bread grain should be barred from Great wearing plain clothes. Judge Chase said that a jusiice court jury can be made up of less than 12. if the district attorney and the de fense attorney agree on a lesser number. Neither attorney has made the request In this case. drew a prompt reply f.'om Dr Charles Dunham, head of the AEC's division of biology and medicine, at Washington, D. C. Zilliacus charged lhat samples of Minnesota wheat contained six times the safe limit. In reply. Dr. Fiw4 Lwtrai 'hip' tt-1'9 PUT IT TO THE TEST! Come in for a demonstration and discover 'Jeep' 4-wheel drive vehicles go more places do more jobs cost less to own! FIRST IN 4-WHEEL DRIVE VEHICLES BY WILLYS MOTORS... WORLD'S LARGEST MANUFACTURED OF 4-WHEEL DRIVE VEHICLES .Al 01 tht irewlni KAISF.R MdultrlM Com In for a demonstration BASIN MOTORS 424 So. 6th St. Tune-In Klamath Falls MAVERICK 5 P.M. SATURDAYS Come to the Home Show that Amen- samples. Dr. Dunham said, ex ceeded tne permissible limit ol inicro-micro-cunes of strontium, per 1.000 grams of wheat. (A curie is a unit of radioactivity; a micro micro curie would be a million millionth of a curie.) The one excessive sample was wheat grown in 1957. Dr. Dunham said. It contained 113 micro-, n.ro curies, or 33 above the permissi ble limit, but another sample from the same area a year later showed a lower-than-average con tent. England said here that the Min nesota and eastern North Dakota areas were ones in which there are apparently heavier than - normal fallouts in times of atomic testing, than in some other areas. The fallout apparently "funnels down" more in some parts of the world than others, he said, probably due to storms or other high atmos pheric conditions. , FRANKLIN FIREPLACE HEATER Tht Hottest Thing In Town CABINETS WINDOWS McCollum Lbr. Home Mart 2030 So. 6th Ph. TU 2-5885 Vater Story Telling Asked WASHINGTON (API The story of water resources development must be told at the Oregon cen tennial exposition. Sen. Richard L. Neubcrger D-Orc said today. He urged the Corps of Engi neers and the Department of the Interior to get together tor a dis nlav of "transmission lines, vari mis dams, irrigation projects, the new industries brought by low cost power in other words, the total value of full river develop ment as promoted by the Depart ment of Interior." "An Oregon centennial exposi t'on without the graphic telling of this stoiy would leave an immense void in the total picture of Oregon growth and dew lopment," the senator said in a letter to Interior I Secretary Fred Seaton. i 7 I i ' ' L ...... ' ,j afL I iJimmmb 4ansiMai, JUNIOR RED CROSS members of Mills, Elementary' School hav collected 4,232 nylon stockings to be sent to Camp White. Veterans Hospital near Medford. Veterans use the hose in a rehabilitation program to make beautiful rugs. The collection was during a contest between rooms with first piece going to students in the primary division teught by Mrs. Lucille Faus with 360; intermediate winners, class taught by Mrs. Alice Tronnes, 209; upper division students of Florence Walker, 1,376. Left to right, center row, Terry Ray, Donne Shaver, student president of the Junior Red Cross at Mills and Sandra Bray. Rear, same order ere Mrs. Geraldine Hanson and Mrs. Julia Cullen, teacher sponsors. In front with the big smile is Ruthie Cole. . al. 1.4 ftt . i. u inn " 111 felor voti fcuT n ehack H oflotni fEATURSS W Li ""- 14 rzz . ..u. mm h . ... W U V.H.V SMILE ON WASHDAY WITH A NEW RCA WHIRLPOOL SELF-SETTING WASHER AND DRYER WwiwM41.ee Drrv P-tt4e rDrr'f n mzz " WASHER 9.95 319.9S big Trade-ins low monthly payments See Our Display Of RCA Whirlpool Built-in Ranges At Th ; HOME SHOW Fri. S Sat. i i i i i Let Us Shew Yon H To Have A Modern Kitchen! Sanitarian Warns Basin Reports of exorbitant charges by septic tank pumpers have re cently come to the attention of ;he Klamath County Health De partment, Paul Sweet, sanitarian, reports. One method of operation, used by these pumpers, is described by Sweet as follows: An operator con tacts uninformed or gullible per sons, informing them that he is required by "state law" to inspect their septic tanks. After the "in spection." he insists that the tank needs pumping, and a confederate shows up to do the pumping, of ten making exorbitant charges. Sweet says that no one Is re quired hy slate law to inspect sep tic tanks, unless they are mal functioning All septic tank pump ers are required by law to have a valid license and bond, to work in Oregon. The Klamath County iieann Department further re quires all pumpers to have in their possession a valid permit that it issues. According to Sweel, "Fly-by- nignt pumpers usually operate near the state boundary, avoiding prosecution by leaving the state. All residents of Klamath Coun ty are urged to get in touch with the county health department if they are approached by any of me pumpers wno cannot show a valid registration, or who ask ex- orbitant amounts for pumping. Standard charges for pumping a TOO-gallon tank average between $15 and S25. according to Sweet. Jaycees Pledge Swim Pool Aid KLAMATH AGENCY - Joseph fund-raising projects. In other words. S5O0 has been earmar'td by the Klamath Reservation Jay cees out of any prolit derived from the tournament to be donated to ward construction of the swim- Jackson, chairman of the Chilo quin Community Park Recreation Council, has announced that the Klamath Reservation Jaycees have made the first pledge to-,,.,, D00i , chiloquin ward contributing funds to the pro- posed swimming pool for the archiioo5!0"31 Communi,y Par, Retarded Pupils This council, which is under the authority of the city- of Chiloquin park board, is launching an all out campaign to raise funds for the swimming pool to be construct ed as soon as the necessary Hinds are either contributed or pledged. The only money in the swim ming pool fund to date is slightly over $100 netted from the recent boxing show in Chiloquin on Feb ruary 12. The Jaycees have pledged a con tribution of $."iO0 payable immed iately following the All Indian Basketball Tournament, providing the financial outcome of the tour nament can make this possihle. Otherwise, the Jaycees will strive toward this goal through other Needs Reported SALK.M I API A state Educa tion Department official testified Tuesday night that Oregon has responsibility to educate the men tally retarded. Mrs. Joy Hills Guhser. assist ant state superintendent of public instruction, told the House Edu cation Committee that a bill which would require all state school districts to provide educa tion of the mentally retarded by 1964 is needed. She said the mentally retarded have been excluded from legisla tion to provide education of thi physically handicapped. COMMODORE HOTEL 12 Sutttr at Jonei Motel Convenience m downtown Stn Francises. Geres )i- 1 rwctly across tht street. Sinfle Double Twin S 7 10 1 7 t 11 A 10 1 ttMrs wftft Al e4 Easter Pretties Just Arrived by Johnathan Logan Cute new frocks with the shirtwaist, sheath or empire look in o bevy of new no-iron soft pastels and prints. Cottons, shaqbarks and the new hop sacking moke this our most adorable colection ... all by Johnothan Logon, of course. I I.,r to 24.05 New Bags Tobies ood tabic of exciting new plostic pattntfl, plcsttc leathers and burlap combinations These new Daval bags in block, bene, white, navy ond red olf have rppered pockets. Real luxury at a tmv $2.91 plus tax. The new ttrow handbags with novelty embroidery, tnmmed in fruit, floer ond etc., welcome your casual wardrobe. Just S2.fl, $3.W and S4 98. It S&H Green Stamps and Open. Till 9 p.m. 30 4ey, rtvolvinf, e EXTRA BIG TRADES EXTRA LOW PRICES! cD Q fo ly-wt.y accounts! F VSHIOX VILLA o TOW S A Or.VntY niiil 316 So. 6th Phone TU 2-444 o esSne