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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1959)
JACK 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Fridav. July 24. 1959 Court Records El. 4 MATH f O! VTT DITIK T roi II Joha Harve Chapman, vitiation feiic rule. duuied motion dtnct nwfMy Elvin Burton Lu. Mltti"ii blc yule, diaraiMed mouon hint " Btr Mary Iuim Grrto. no operator Heenae. dumuMd motion district attorney- . Allen C Lng". perVe H cent. II y Erneat Clarence Graham viola' ton feat rule, diimuaed motion dinnrt tionwv Carrol) Bfif-vam. feu procure hf-enae. dumiMcd motion diatnct at lrmt Vtnce Mowoe Towmatnd Jr.. fail ton at atop tun. Rubra Nethemal Joael. combina tion overload. 15 Lfwu Richard Roberta. exceaetv length. S14 W. R Crumley, obtaining money and propertv nv falie pretentM. r ej netted preliminary hearing, ?' A'J fuat 14. at 10 a m , released on SI W property bond Dwdm Dale Carpenter, exeeuive length. Sin John Jarrell. fail amp at atop aifn. t Emeito Aguilar Conuiet. (all dim headlight. SS Frank Charlea Neutz. violation baa ftr rule. SIS David J. Oavu. fail yield Mght of -v. 15 Everett Cent Allen. Improper muf fler.. 5 Carl Henry Leo. violation bane rule, n V) Jerrr Van re S wanton, group axle Overload. S62 ConfTnvoiri Show Sot ntf Sim. From 12:45 CITY BRIEFS Opani :43 l ON , -Sl WE' rf AIR New Job Ronnie McCarroIi, Redding, is visiting her mother, Vrt. Jerry MrConnel, li8 Sum mers Lane, prior to accepting an office manager bookkeeping por tion with Fuller Enterprisej in San Francijwo. Mrs. McCarroIi is the former Bonnie Ellis. Family Viciii Allen and Dean l.achman. San Diejo. are visiting at the home of their grandmoth. er Clara E. Godell. 325 North Third. Parents of the bovs, Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Larhman. will meet thcrn here this weekend. Belly ,ln GresseM. an aunt, will also arrive from Tacoma. Maverick Square Dancers will meet at Altamont Junior High music room Saturday, July 23. Dancing will begin at 8 p m. Bring your own mack and service. All square dancers and spectators welcome. Annual Picnic All Klamath County Home Extension Units will have a picnic at Wiard Park Wednesday. July 29, starling at 11 a.m. Polluck lunch at noon Picnickers will bring own table service. Coffee and punch will be provided. All homemakers are welcome. Coffee Hour will be held in Westminster Hall of Ihe Peace Memorial Presbyterian Church Sunday, July 2fi, at 1" 30 a.m. to honor the Rev. and Mrs. F. L. Raney, Xovato. California. "DENNIS THE MENACE" The Malin Woo lies Sheep Clubi"or . met at the home of James Otto-;B"er man on July 1. Last year's presi-jBend dent took over the meeting. The Brookings ninutes were suspended because i Burns the secretary and five others wereEuSene ' absent. Lakeview Mike Croft and Don Tofell gaiejMed,ord i report on safety and paid a Pri in because it was for the meet-i01 Bwld ng before fhis one. They also, end'e,Pn1. ruruanu riirpuri ' LOOK, I'M SORffY I LOST AAV TEAVES, HENB AnO I WANT W TO KNOW W GOING TO OJt DENNIS ASOThfcK DKUU Ha'a John Paul Stochlor 3ELI-flre.t officer (n Naval History to"mlplaea" on fully-equipped, e.worthy-ond betlle-ready deetroyer acorll "DoritGiveUP the Ship 'HUWALLIS mm mmimmmmmm Greater Depths, Heights Contained Beneath Sea By LEONARD ENGEL hnd do things impossible to man Copyright, 1939, himself. While I was aboard the ABOARD RESEARCH VESSEL Columbia University research ship VEMA i.Pt The most inacces-IVema. one or another device for Life In Shelter Has Advantages MIAMI. Fla. (APi-Lile in a bomb shelter may he confining, hut it's free of some complica tioas that exist above ground. A summons for a civil suit has been handed to the sheriff's de partment for service on Melvin Minmson when he and his bride emerge Saturday from a two week honeymoon 10 feet under Miami. The suit contends Minm son and another man failed to go through with a deal to buy a beauty parlor. Mininson, 2S, and the former Maria Rodriguez, 27, were wed beside the shelter July 12 and de scended into it to publicize the 21-ton structure and point up civil defense. NOT TRANSLATIONS Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "Sonnets from the Portuguese were not translations. In reality. they were poems expressive of her own love for Robert Brown ing and she used the title merely as a disgui.se. sible region on earth is the bot tom of the ocean. Submarines have gone as deep as l.ooo leet. ine oatnyscapn a special vehicle for deepwater div inghas been down to 13,000 feet. Vast reaches of the ocean are 18,000 feet deep or more. In the Marianas Trench west of Guam, British and Soviet research ships have sounded the almost unbe lievable depth of 36,000 feel deep enough to bury ML Everest, with mile and a quarter to spare. In spite nf its inaccessibility, the ocean floor is being made to re veal its secrets. Submarine moun tains more massive than any on land: canyons dwarfing the Grand Canyon of the Colorado; plains that stretch for hundreds of miles without a rise of as much as foot; delicate starfish and other forms of lile marvelously adapted to the dark, near-freezing waters and thousands - of - pounds - per' square - inch pressures of the ocean floor. Oceanographers visit this strange, hidden world with the eyes, ears and hands of science instruments that can go places NOW PLAYING! Contlnuoui Set. ft in. From 11:4 J Optnt emit ; .1 ;N FREED JIMMY CLANTON SANDY STEWART CHUCK BERRY tlx Lile Ritchie VUINS iki mm iu aum xum IX UMUB tUMS Ma UKtfll Alis Companion "KookiY Ftafur 7.51 4 ITiOS OPEN DAILY 7IOO P. M ENDS TONIGHT! . uitytTID PROM OOTI Shewn at 9:41 Onlr ,E3M3S1 Li- irn iu k f -i Sunday and Monday BieVT JAMES STEWART P0rR ' Jrx.WM NOVAK Qualified Men Sought By CG The Coast Guard is looking for qualified radiomen, sonarmen quartermasters and electricians mates. William L. McVey, offi cer In charge ol the guard re cruiting ' station in Eugene sent out a call for men who have had prior service in the Coast Guard or Navy and who specialized in one of those fields. Rating for enlistees will depend or. acceptance, on rates they held at time of discharge, and date of discharge. Inquiries should be directed to Ihe officer in charge nf the Coast Guard Recruiting Station, Room 13, U.S. Post Office, Eugene. 4-H NEWS MALIN WOOL1ES Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U hwr U 4:M a. m. Friday Max. Mia. Prep. ;aie a true-lai.se test on the re- :ort. It was voted to have the ser vant at arms each put up SO cents to be given to the best be- laved member of the year. The meeting adjourned and Mrs. Ottoman served refreshments. The club next met at the home of William Rajnus on July 15 The meeting was called to order by President Evelyn Rajnus. The minutes were read and roll was called. Two members were absent We decided what would be done for decoration at the fair, what to wear, and how to get us, the equipment, and the animals there. The meeting was adjourned and Mrs. Rajnus served refreshments Lois Cutright, News Reporter . JUNIOR BRONCS 65 56 .01 99 60 .12 M M .12 fS 88 60 .18 84 57 87 60 T 98 57 62 54 64 55 T 5 72 Ti 77 59 .OS 89 55 89 52 82 52 Ti 83 66 T Redmond Roseburg Salem The Dalles Eastern Oregon Fair through Saturday. Low tonight 50-60 de grees; high Saturday 80-90. Western Oregon Fair through Saturday except patches of night and morning cloudiness. Low to night 50-60 degrees; high Satur day 75-85 in northern interior, 90 in southern interior and 60-70 on coast. Westerly to northwesterly coastal winds 10-20 miles an hour. Northern Oregon Beaches Mostly cloudy through Saturday with some afternoon clearing. Temperature range 50-80 degrees. Westerly beach winds 8-18 miles an hour. Grants Pass and Vicinity Mostly clear through Saturday. High 88-93 degrees. Low tonight 50-55. High Saturday 88-93. Baker and Vicinity Mostly Yacht Club Slates Race A full afternoon of racing and activities at the Klamath Yacht Club is announced for Sunday, weather permitting. Last Sunday's sailboat races were so successful and so well received that it is planned to re peat them on Sunday. L. Orth Sisemore, chairman, said there will be races for powered boats if there is sufficient interest shown. Sailboat races will start at 2.30 p.m., wind permitting. Projected time races are planned for in beard and outboard motor boats aurmg ine auernoon. Fred Hayes, sailing a Flying Dutchman, came in first to win last Sunday's sailboat race. Ed Guarena, sailing an L-14, placed second, and Fred Ehlers, sailing a Great Lakes Skimmer, was third. "Every boat operator observed the safety markers Sunday," Com modore Ray Byrnes stated "There wasn't a single accident to mar the pleasure of the after noon." . Dinner will be served at the club for members and guests starting at 6:30 p.m. upon reservation. fair rhrnnoh StatilrHav. Cooler July 15 was the date of Ihe reg-Low oni nt 44.52 oegrees; nigh Growers' Office Being Revamped TULELAKE Extensive remod eling of the Tulelake Growers'! Association office is in progress, according to Cliff Jenkins; man-! ager. The offices of the seed certifi cation and agricultural commis sioner are being moved next door into the room formerly occupied by the Department of Motor Ve hicles. This room is being par titioned with glass to make the two offices light. The rooms in the rear of the Growers' offices will be utilized as a large meeting room for the association. Most of the work is being done by Jenkins. exploring the ocean bottom was constantly in operation. Vema and three other ocean re search craft were trying to find good drilling site as the first step toward a historic sea-explora tion project: the bold Mohole scheme for drilling a hole through the earth's crust beneath the sea. 'We won't know for some months whether a good place for the Mohole has been found," de clares Dr. Arthur Maxwell of the Office of Naval Research, co-spon sor, with the National Science Foundation, of the Mohole sur vey. "By the time the data col lected is analyzed, however, no area of the ocean, will be better known than the survey area of the Atlantic north of Puerto Rico." A key bottom-exploration pool is the echo depth Under, an ear that hears the depth of the water. Another device, the thermograd. can be put down to the bottom to feel and record temperatures within the ocean floor, and tell, lor instance, whether volcanic ac tivity is taking place near by. An eye for viewing the ocean floor is furnished by the bottom cam era. But the most striking tool for probing the bottom is a 40-foot piece of steel pipe surmounted by a finned weight shaped like a fore shortened rocket. This is the pis ton corer. Gravity'and an ingen ious piston arrangement drive it up to fW feet into the ocean floor and punch out rod-shaped samples cf the layers of mud and sediment forming the sea bottom. Cores brought back by the li ton machine reveal not only the nature of the ocean floor but hid den chapters from earth's book of history. During the Mohole survey, Vema averaged a core every other day. Analyzing the core samples will take several months. Tension al ways mounted aboard the ship when the three-man coring gang turned on the powerful diesel mot or of the winch that pays out the miles-long heavy steel cable car rying the cort . The corer often comes up badly bent from its jarring encounter with the ocean bottom. Moreover, there is the ever-present possi bility of the cable .breaking an accident that at least means loss of the corer and thousands of feet of snarled cable, and can send the cable whipping across the deck like a lethal snake. ular meeting of the Junior Broncs Horse Club at their clubhouse. The meeting was called to order by President Carol Woody. Roll was then called by Sandy Wood ard, secretary. As a topic for roll. each person in turn named a part of a horse. The minutes of the last meeting were read. A letter from OTI was read thanking us for riding in the grand entries of the Fourth of July ro deos and congratulating us on our conduct and for winning the tro phy for the rodeos. The club discussed riding in the grand entry at the Tulelake Jun ior Rodeo as a club. Then the club had a session of defining the parts of a horse. Su san Lapsley led the club in the pledges. The meeting was adjourned after which dancing was enjoyed by all. Danny Croft served refreshments. The next meeting is to be Au gust 13 at the home of R, K. Coddington. Donna Williams, News Reporter , Leonardo da Vinci's famed "The Last Supper" is painted on the wall of the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy. On The Record KLAMATH FALLt BIRTHS BO lH MILLER Born to Mr and Mrl Stan ley Miller July 23 in KUmltb Valley HotpUA! boy. weighing Iba., g-e Off. Its Roc.snrr Box: 14 Glrli: Ul DRIVER DEALT WITH WIMBLEDON, England lUPIi The father of a 16-year-old boy who was fined 59 for reckless driving on a motor scooter, ad vised the court: I have dealt with him in such a way that he has not yet been able to sit on his scooter and ride it again." REAUV 6000 Pa Saturday 80-85. Fire Weather Fire danger moderate in Northwestern Oregon and along the coast through Sat urday. Continued high danger elsewhere in Oregon with very dry fuels in most areas. Nation Wide VAN SERVICE House to House City to City State to Stote EAD'S TRANSFER t STORAGE Bonded It Licensed Brokers 553 Market TU 2-4671 Would you like to be 17 Degrees Cooler at home, or in office or store? C-thru Aluminum Awnings C-thru gives -- 12 months a ysor service. 7 colors to od distinctive beauty and comfort. Colors stoy bright for years. ' Custsomixed installation. I An engineered awning. Air conditioning costs cut.' Prices start, 36x30 at $24.00, and up. GEORGE CLARK Phone TU 4-3241, 2021 Lavey St., Klamath Falls. Call for free estimates. Also - aluminum storm windows, screens and combination doors. The Gothic Library of Parlia ment in Ottawa is Canada's equiv alent to our Library of Congress. Klamath Fa Ma. Orrgnn aVrvini Sou t htm Or?inn and Northtrn California Publlihtvl dally except Saturday by Southtrn Oregon Publlihlng Com pan v Main at Caplanada Phone TUxedo 4-8111 FRANK IKNKINS. Editor BI1X JENKINS, Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Entered at eecond claa matter at the poet office at Klamath ralla, Oregon on Auguet 30. tm under art of Congreta. March 3. IRTft Second-claaa poatai paid at Klamath Palla. Oregon. ana ei aontnonai mailing n.rteea SirBSCftTPTlON KATES Carrier I Month t Ml 4 Mnnttu - , ,, 9 fin 1 Year ll 00 Mail In Advance 1 Month .. - . f 1 V Month . , ,,. I R Vl 1 Year . , I3Q0 Carrier and Dealer Week day, copy V Sundaja. copy tnc UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDI! BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Suptcrther not receiving deliver of their Herald and New, pleat phone Ttwedo 4-MH before T P M After T P M phone Maurice Miller. Or culatmn Manager a TUxedo 4-4751 ' Top money-ma kr NEW HOMELITE 7-21 You cen m motg money wrth the, new Horn Mt 7 21 Cham sew be ceutt it Itts you cut more wood feter. ftps through 20" trees in IB seconds Gear dove gives you plenty of lugging power to feti trees up to 7 feet m dimeter. lght 21 pounds (less bar and Cham) is easy to hadie. 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