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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1959)
I - PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON MONDAY. APRIL 27J959 Coalition Slates Hot Foot To Feathered Fugitives WASHINGTON AP - Thir.;c are looking bad (or Capitol Hill starlings, with Congress and the Supreme Court conspiring against them. That coalition Is about to give the hot foot to the feathered fugi tives from such places as the House Version Of Income Tax SALEM lAPi-The stale Tax Commission Saturday issued the following tables comparing present annual state income taxes with those proposed by the House Tax ation Committee: Single Persons Total Income Present Proposed $1,000 $ 9 I 8 $2,000 39 32 $3,000 81 66 $4,000 133 106 $5,000 16 155 $6,000 239 205 $7,000 308 269 $8,000 375 329 $9,000 441 389 $10,000 504 4 Married with 2 children $1,000 0 0 $2,000 0 -0 3,000 7 12 $4,000 2!) 12 $5,000 58 74 $6,000 01 115 $7,000 129 ' 165 $8,000 172 221 $9,000 ' 220 281 $10,000 ' 270 341 Married with 4 children $1,000 0 0 $2,000 0 0 $3,000 0 0 $4,000 6 8 $5,000 ' . 2! , 32 $6,000 60 66 $7,000 97 106... $8,000 139 155 ' $9,000 186, 205 - $10,000 " 239 t 269 - "DENNIS THE MENACE" OPENS 4$ JAMES iNM SONET fl n h ii iiriaaMtaaaaaWaaMar-"" A'ashington Cathedra! and the Treasury Department. But there might be a stay oi execution for the winged cacklers because Congress isn't about to ncrmit the Supreme Court to be the only estaDiisnmem on lapiioi Hill to apply the shock treatment to the birds. That undoubtedly would drive ll tl... ,,....1;-..- - r.-.r.it.-:!. which already has more than its share and won't have its delense lines drawn up lor several months. The House Appropriations Com mittee made public today the plaintive plea of the court for money to throw into the battle of the starlings. It also hinted that it doesn't intend to do anything about it right aWay. Led by Associate Justices Hugo Black and Tom Clark as emis saries for Chief Justice Earl War ren, the court asked the commit tee to fork over $35,000 to install an electronic bird elimination sys tem on the court building. This system is in operation on many local buildings, including the stately cathedral and tne Treasury. It doesnt kill or injure the birds, but gives them the shock of their lives and persuades them to go elsewhere for a restful night. The noisy birds in recent months have selected the Capitol and the Supreme Court for a quiet night's rest, iwhere they can perch on the marble ledges and shapely columns in comfort. The court got wind of plans to install the shock system on the Capitol and on congressional of fice buildings and suggested' that if this work is to be done on other buildings in the Capitol Plaza, "then money should be provided, we submit we hope for similar work on the Supreme Court Building." , "You are very finely stating the promcm. commented ttop. Jonn Rooney (D-NY), chairman of a subcommittee considering t h e court's plea. "This committee would agree to that solution, but until the architect tells us that he is going to see that the birds you have over there are not chased over here with this electronic de vice, I think our hands are tied." ' Ry FRANK CAREY WASHlVnTON (API Tern. perature-tamed viruses' were sug 0ptMl tnlav as a nnuible new approach to developing vaccines New Virus Vaccine Eyed By Medical Researcher ' Did vou know this uttle gopher hoe woolv wxojui ecu- emu c CITY BRIEFS .TOIMHiaraK'WMIJJll lla 11 art' I I THE SEBRINQ GRANO PRIX tils rmaratta if Ik null! litir- lllinll Splfll Clt Iwlltlnl CUlllt kkl- GATES OPEN 6:45 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT! MARLON BRANDO MIIKOIAK nCHNlRAMA TICHMICOLOK Futurt: 7:20 t 10:T0 Wheat Farm Deadline Set May 1 of this year is an im portant deadline for certain own ers of wheat farms which have been acquired by an agency hav ing the right of eminent domain. according to barl Wilson, chair man. Klamath County Agricultur al Stabilization and Conservation Committee. The May 1 deadline annlios to those owners who were so dis placed from wheat-allotment farms during the period January 1, 1954 to August 28, 1958. The chairman explains that such an owner may file a notice of his displacement and a request that the allotment be pooled and used to the extent necessary to estab lish an "equitable" allotment for other land owned or purchased by him. Tenants on such land are not eligible to file such requests and in order that the transferred wheat allotment may be effective for the 1960 wheat crop, on the other farm, however, the owner must file the required notices in the local ASC county office not later than May 1, 1959. Wilson points out that only a few days remain before ttys May 1 deadline for requesting such ac tion. He urges that wheat farm owners who believe they are eli gible to request pooling and trans fer of "displaced" wheat allot ments get in touch with the coun ty office immediately if they want the allotments to be effective on the new land in 1960. League of Women Voters will meet on Wednesday, April 29, at 8 p.m. in the county library lec ture room to hear Gerald Vcrgeer speak on "How the Council-Manager Plan Works in Klamath Falls." Annual District Convention of Southern Oregon Royal Neighbors ot America will be held April 29 at the 100F Hall. Registration will be at 9:30 a.m., and the meeting will open promptly at 10 a.m. Virginia Duval!, 'state super visor, will be present. N'CO Wives Club-rKingsley Field NCO Wives Club will have a so cial meeting on Tuesday, April 28, at 6:30 p.m. at the Chuck Wagon. All infield officers wives and wives of A.l.C. are invited. For reservations please call Shei lah Buttcrworth at TU 4-5025. Hus bands are invited to join their wives at the Chuck Wagon fol lowing dinner. ' Jolly Neighbors postponed un til further notice, because of ill- Aloha Chapter No. 61, Order of the Eastern Star, invites all Eastern Star members to attend the chapter's Friendship Night, one of the big meetings ot the year, at 8 p.m. Tuesday,' April 28, at the Masonic Temple on Klamath Avenue. Navy Mothers Club, No. 804 will meet in the new armory on Shasta Way, Tuesday, April 28, for an all day meeting with pot- luck luncheon at noon. All moth ers who have anyone connected with the Navy,,Coast Guard or Ma rines will be welcome. Mrs. Peg gy Hustead is commander. Mrs. Fred Mellentine is adjutant. Mary Martha Circle of the fmmanuel Baptist Church will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 28. in the high school room at the church. This will be the last meet ing with Mrs. ' Charles Meyers, wife of the pastor, before the fam ily leaves Klamath Falls. There will be an interesting program. All women will be welcome. Degree of Honor will hold a regular business meeting tonight at 8 o clock in the K(J Hall. All officers are asked to be present. Drill team practice at 7:30. Thimble Club of the Neighbors of Woodcraft will meet at the KC Hall on Wednesday, April 29, at 8 p.m. Ewauna Toastmlstress Club will have a regular meeting to night at the Willard Hotel at 7:30. Rowena McDonald will be toast- mistress and Donna Journee, top. icmistress. The public is invited. Annual Dinner Klamath Coun cil of Churches, will be held April 28, 8:30 p.m., at the First Pres byterian Church. Chaplain John M. Humphreys, director of chap laincy services at the Oregon State Hospital, Salem, will talk on "The Church's Ministry and Mental Health. The public is in vited to hear the speaker. THEY WERE READY lZm ANYTHING!... fOT . eaddl tramp I C V and hallcatt TiliwScort: COLOKi - -as mcmio ' m mmiT JT TODD-BAXTER-LOM vs Chase a CROOKED i in in V JUl ERROL FLYNN -JULIETTE GRECO TREVOR HOWARD - EDDIE ALBERT ORSON WELLES Oimsi eoto f ot iut C Of C Chief Gives Talk To Meeting WASHINGTON (API Business men must plunge into the political arena to battle for a sound dollar and free markets, the president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said today.' "We must quit thinking of pol itics as a dirty word," William A McDonnell said in the keynote ad dress opening the chamber's 47th annual meeting here. "Any businessman who insists that he is not interested in politics Is like a drowning man who says he's hot interested in water." Mc Donnell declared. "We are in it ud to our necks and we had better icarn how to swim and to swim effectively." More than 4.000 delegates, ob servers and guests were expected during the meeting, which contin ues through Wednesday. The chamber has supported Ei senhower's stand for economy in government, though it has insisted even greater savings should be made. McDonnell, a St. Louis banker, underscored the inflation theme in his keynote talk. The dollar has lost 52 cents of its purchasing power in the past 2P years, he said, and continued: "If we keep on going as we have been, we will have a 35-cent dollar IP years from now and a 25-cent dollar in another 10 years, and a 10-cent dollar a little further down the line." against unconquered virus dis eases. Experiments have shown that some strains of virus can be de veloped to 'grow best at higher temperatures and' others at lower readings. Dr. Albert B. Sabin re ported. Their potency can be made to vary accordingly, ne added. Dr. Sabin. a nationally known researcher at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, prepared his report for the an nual meeting of the National Acad emy of Sciences. He said the findings might open the way to .such things as: 1. Developing improved strains of virus for use in the recently developed polio vaccines of the live virus tvoe. 2. Developing weaker strains of the viruses responsible lor a variety of human and animal di seases against which there are no vaccines at present. The idea would be to use the tamed viruses in vaccines. . Dr. Sabin is one of the devel opers of the Still-controversial "live virus" vaccines against po lio. These have not yet been ap proved by the Public Health Serv ice for extensive field-testing in this country. He said the new findings about the genetics of polio viruses were an outgrowth of the research that produced the viruses now em ployed in such "live virus" vac cines. He gave these further details: i. It was found that the capa city of polip viruses to reproduce themselves sufficiently in the ner vous system of monkeys to pro duce paralysis - was - related to their capacity to reproduce them selves at fever temperature in test-tube tissue cultures. That is, those - that could multiply cxteh- were highly virulent, while those that multiplied poorly or not at all were much less virulent or completely nonvirulent. 2. In-one experiment it was found possible to change a punch- less, weak-sister strain of polio virus into one that paralyzed mon keys simply by cultivating the napm tin hv tpn at varying temperatures until it grew very well at 106 degrees ranrenneu. i in fnntrad a virus stiain capable of causing paralysis was converted to a powerless, sissified virus merely by growing it at suc cessively lower temperatures. Sabin said the new findings nad immediate applicability as a test tube means for estimating the vir ulence of different strains of polio ivirus without having to inoculate QUALITY BUILDERS DESIGNERS WM. i. POWILL B-iS RECLAMATION PHONI TU 2-4S74 Sea Yellow Paiaafcamliir Dlraciarf. . PLANS SECRECY INQUIRY WASHINGTON ifJPD - The Senate constitutional rights sub committee will launch an investi gation Tuesday to find out if ex cessive secrecy is retarding U.S. scientific progress. RUG REPAIR By HARRY BASNIJIAN "The Magic Carpet Man" DOMESTIC or ORIENTAL RUGS RE-BOUND. RE-FRINGED. RE-WEAVED NEW MF.THO0 CLEANS H5S ESPLANADE TU 1-4411 Non-Surgical Method Reduces , Hemorrhoids! SCL-l A peat tcientific advancement in tht trlmttl of Htmorrkoub. Discomfort And inconvenience 11 practically afgfaflt. Afaity find to lief in a few dayi. It no longer . necessary io bear the misery of this-painful affliction. Rcsttlti ej treatment are quickly evident. Dr. Reynoldi Clinic Natwopathic thynam 1144 Center, NX, Sales, Oaa. "the best place to shop ofter aU" FOR THE LADIES . WHO WEAR WHITE . . UNIFORMS WHITE SWAN BOB EVANS LA GRACE We have uniforms galore for nurses, beauticians and waitresses in tailored or high fashion stvles with long or short sleeves. Fabrics Include cotton, nylon and nylon taffeta. 5.98 to 16.98 III Your Charge Account PRESENTING THE NATIONAL OPEN CHAMPIONS FOR 1959 WorM's illy f fr'ct'blt htardttp th Oalaxl SkyUntr. Hi 1U1I )p folds down into the trvntr quickly,- aulemoli-11 . cally. d.iJtndofaJyl Wonderful (dial Waif till you try it. . T1i Itravry cnvrtKt.a avaryMt would) Uvo to own. Ford' i Thundnrbird it 4 polling ict big. unauttionably Amirico I mo it deiirtd cor. Ward Chief Cancer Told CHICAGO (API Doctors say a tumor removed from Sewell L. Avery was cancerous, but that the 85-year-old former chairman of Montgomery Ward & Co. is mak inp Kalisfnrtnrv nrnffress. The tumor 'was removed from Avery's colon Wednesday. A spokesman at Chicago Wesley Me morial Hospital said a biopsy indi catcd the cancer was localized with no evidence of spreading. Avery dominated the manage merit ot Montgomery Ward from 1931 to 1955. He retired Friday from the company's board of di rectors. California Weather United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Tuesday except early morning high fog: high today San Francisco M. Oakland 68. ban .Ma teo 70. San Ralael 72; low tonight 4H-54; westerly winds 10-20 nxp.h Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Part ly cloudy today; fair tonight and Tuesday; warmer. Sierra Nevada: Fair through Tuesday except some afternoon cloudiness: warmer. Sacramento Valley: Fair and warmer through Tuesday; high to day 70-75, Tuesday 77-83: low to night 40-50; variable winds 7-15 m.p.n. Northwestern California: Fair through Tuesday except night and morning high fog on coast: warm er inland: high today and low to night I'kiah 70-44. Santa Rosa ?.- .19, Napa 73-45; northwest winds 10-20. m.p.h. near roast. 1JILLS ONE IN FOl'R BKRI.IN U'PI - One of every four adult deaths in East Ger many is caused by cancer, ac cording to an East German ran cer expert. The Communist news paper Volkstimme of Magdeburg quoted Dr. F. Lindner as saying 50.000 of the 200.000 East German adults who die each year are can car vlcuax. s t a- J1! ' it. ..II.. UJLAiil VJi.i.dAni Ul Wail k J W0MDE1RFUL AND Wt) UaitMr tomrortiolo Galoitt Svntmor hoi f ei Bf tht n twill alLhmt fovonfo twn-ti Look to America's Convertibli Specialists for sunshine living best! If your fast nuis to top-dow nerj (and whose doesn't) just consider for a moment the glamor ous Galavie Sunliner . Ford's newest, most ex citing edition of the most popular convertibles everbuilt. See it and marvel at its Thunderbird styling. Drive It and thrill to its Thunderbird sizile. Own it and you'll love its saving ways. Glistening Dia mond Lustre Finish never needs wax. Mufflers are aluminired for double life. Standard Six and Thunderbird ,'-8 engines go 4000 miles between oil changes and thrive on Tower-cost regular gas. The sleeli-tailored top is double stitched and fade resistant . . . and folds down completely flush. Best of all, the Sunliner is the lowest-priced con vertible of the best-selling three. ms WOMBS HOST ILOTJUljX PXaPCEUONSD CAM F0ID DIVISION. Serd M010I C0MFMV BALSIGER MOTOR CO. Main I Esplanade Klamath Falls, Oregon Sh Mm 31-mi Virsln it forfs Pulr BUYER'S DIGEST ii tht May READER'S DIGEST liara Now ti m Whin You Buy I Ni Car. Siti u Yh Drfvt t