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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1960)
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Friday. January 22, 1960 PAGE SEVEN r SENIOR CITIZEN CANDIDATES v A . '' ' ur Jaycees Ready Award Presentations Each year about this time the! as they must' be, arc 35 years of i Klamath Kails Junior Chamber o(',af.e or less Commerce makes awards to men judged most creditable to them selves and the community. Three such awards will be presented Fri day beginning at 6:45 p.m. dur ing the annual Jaycees banquet in the Willard Hotel. Candidates (or the traditional Distinguished Service award are Wayne Plaisted, Paul Cruikshank and the Rev. Robert Groves. All, Norman Jacob of Merrill, Duane Blackman of Henley, and Howard Holliday, who farms near the Wey erhaeuser Company mill, are can didates for the Outstanding Young Farmer of Klamath County award Nominees for the Senior Citizen award, instituted here this year, are Mike Balsiger, Ron Phair and Verp Owens. Men 35 or over are considered senior citizens by Jaycees. All have done outstanding work say club members. The Young Farmer award candidates all have boosted crop or livestock yields and have practiced progressive farming techniques. Distinguished Service award can didates all are very active in com munity affairs, church work and organizations. So are candidates for the Senior Citizen award. Keynote speaker for the banquet is Harlan Bosworth, winner of the Distinguished Service award in 1938, when he was hero with the California Oregon Power Com pany. Bosworth since has become vice president and assistant to the gen-J cral manager of Copco at Medford. f He is considered an authority on; power production from atomic en- ergy. j MIKE BALSIGER RONALD PHAIR VERN OWENS DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CANDIDATES PAUL CRUIKSHANK REV. ROBERT GROVES WAYNE PLAISTED YOUNG FARMER CANDIDATES 4; ;rS. ZS- vf , S 11 , ,v ;r-'FtPv I Wv '1 JVif City Airport Vote Slated LAKE VIEW Lake County vol ers will again have an opportun ity to decide whether funds should be raised for improvement of the city airport. The decision was made at a special meeting of the town council here Tuesday night Representatives from the county court, chamber of commerce, Fre mont Forest Service, West Coast Airlines, and other interested citizens met for discussion on the matter, once turned down by coun ty voters. The chamber of commerce will have charge of a drive to contact signers in order to put the mea sure on the ballot by petition ir May. The need is for $24,000 to be raised to match the $32,000 in federal funds that have been prac tically assured in telephone dis cussions with the district airport engineer of the Federal Aviation Agency in Seattle. Sheriff Ousted From VFW Post HILLSBORO, 111. (AP)-Shcriff Harold Whitten has been ousted as a member of Post No. 1036 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Whitten said he received a letter from the post which said he was an undesirable member and that his membership had been revoked. The ouster came after the sher iff led a raid on the post's club rooms and seized two slot ma chines. The post paid a $100 fine. PIGEONS TOOTSIE TICKLER PARIS (UPI) The city coun cil today weighed the ethics and feasibility of a plan to get rid of pigeons by spraying public monuments and buildings with a chemical which tickles pigeons' feet. It has been previously deter mined $56,000 is needed for work on the north and south runway 55 per cent of which can be fed eral matching funds. The present airstrip is cracking and grass is coming through to the point where; it will take about $4,000 to patch belore putting on a seal coat. The runway is 5,300 feet long by 150 feet wide. The suggested repair is for an overlay oi 500 feet on each end with two-inch asphalt concrete and a 100-foot strip of one and one half inch AC for the remaining 4,300 feet, tapered to 10 feet on each side. Voters are being informed that unless the repair is done the air port will h e to be abandoned in a few years. The project is too great for the city to support and it is felt the benefit is to the county as a whole, considering air travel service and fire protection oi lands throughout the county. This was evidenced by the pro tection afforded last summer dur ing a time of extreme fire danger. Planes loaded heavily with borate were used by federal agencies to effectively check potentially serious fires on timber and other range lands. The airport was sold to the city for a nominal figure at the term ination of its use as a naval air station. CABINET TOP SPECIAL Formica, Consoweld, Nevamar, 1 i jf ' vtt M 1 A&LJ IIWI $198 I sq. ft. Textolite, Pionite, Laminart LABOR and MATERIALS To Install Any Of The Above Laminates We Give Green Stamps McColium HOME MART 2030 So. 6th TU 2-5885 DAVE JENISON. former resi dent of Klamath Falls, hat returned here from Coquille to be associated with O'Halr's Memorial Chapel as an apprentice mortician. Jenison, his wife, Bunny, and 4-year-old daughter live at 4416 Bristol. REFRIGERATOR WITH FREEZER? Hapco has the size . . . 4 and the price . . . TA .... to tit every budget! BOYS & GIRLS! There'i o $10,000 Cash Col lege Scholarship waiting for one of yau! Phone TU 4-8484 Afts. & Eves. HOWARD HOLLIDAY DUANE BLACKMAN NORMAN JACOB REDECORATED Office Space $45 Month Inquire DREWS' Manitore Phone TU 4-4121 Road Studied By Group (AP) The Oregon Commission probably SALEM Highway will tell at Its Jan. 28-29 meeting what it plans to do about rebuild ing Highway 42, between Roseburg and Coquille. But chances are that whatever It does, it will not satisfy the Douglas and Coos County interests which want the narrow, curvy road rebuilt quickly. These interests feel that the Legislature, which authorized a four-million-dollar bond issue for Highway 42, gave the commission a mandate to get the job done toon. The Highway Commission says the job would cost at least 10 mil lion dollars. It says it is impos sible to get the other six millions quickly. At its Jam 28-29 meeting, the commission plans to announce what projects it will build in the next year. U looks as though it will provide about one million dol lars for Highway 42 this year. Newspaper SPOT ADS ore inexpensive repeated daily $1.16 NOW OPEN FOR YOUR DINING AND DANCING PLEASURE Same good food . . . same friendly atmosphere! When you're having a "night out" . . . make the evening complete , . . stop at M0LAT0RES 1112 Main Ph. TU 4-6298 SPECIAL PURCHASE BEDROOM onnirai j rrr"" I I includes 1 JWPCUI If. 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