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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1960)
HERALD A NT) NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Monday. Feb. R. WfiO PACE THREE CITY BRIEFS Mr. Orson Stearin announces there will be a meeting of the parent sppnsors of the Junior Red Cross Tuesday, February 9. at 10:30 a.m. at chapter headquar ters. i Mills-Pondcrosa PTA will hold Us regular meeting Wednesday. February 10. at 2:15 p.m. in the Mills auditorium. Past presidents ?ill be honored in observance of Rounders Day. Special welcome tended to all past officers. Room visitation from 1 to 2 p.m. Baby fflttcr will be provided. Everyone urged to attend. i Women's Civil Defense Commit tee of Klamath County will meet in the Fireside Room of the First rJresbylerian Church, 601 Pine Street. Tuesday, February 9, from i. to 3;30 p.m. A movie will be- shown. Mrs. Irving Burke is a patient in Seattle General Hospital where she rjccenlly had back surgery. Cards ana letters wilt reacn ner mere. 'l)r. Marian Luten will be guesl jncaker at a meeting of the Catho lic Daughters of America tonight lfJ o'clock sharp in Sacred Heart Parish Hall. All members are re quested to attend. "'Are You Positive," a full-color, animated film dealing with the misconceptions that the public has about tuberculosis, has been re ceived by the office of the Klamath TlB and Health Association from Portland and is available for a short time to schools or groups ujon request by calling TU 4-6259. 'Royal Neighbors of America will hold a regular meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday, February 10, at the IOOF Hall. All members are urged tb attend. 'Baby Robert Masscy, 10-month old son of Dr. and Mrs. George flfeWoody Massey, is home and improved following hospitalization ijl Hillside Hospital, The Men's Fellowship of the Bi Me Baptist Church will host a sweetheart dinner at 6:30 p.m Tnesday, February 9, in Field's Hall for wives and sweethearts Mr. and Mrs. David Bunger will sfiow pictures of Palestine, Egypt and Babylon. The Rev. Ron Hall pastor of lmmanuel Baptist Church, vflll have the devotions. All men are invited to take wives and sweethearts. Jack R. Roper of Roper and Roper will attend the 76lh annual convention of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of Ameri- eS. to convene February 16-19 in Kansas City, Missouri. Some 600 jjfembers of the organization are expected to attend. First Meeting of the Klamath Theater Group at Sacred Heart Academy Auditorium will be held at 7:30 p.m today. Those not able to send in required information but still interested in joining may at tend. Miss Helene Harder, Lutheran missionary to Japan, will speak tonight at 7:30 at Hope Lutheran Church, South Sixth Street and Homedale Road. She is on tour of United Lutheran Churches of Cali fornia, Oregon and Washington. Pastor A. C. Neubauer extends a cordial invitation to all interested to be present to hear the story o( Christian work in Japan. Madame President Patricia Hag- eman has changed the meeting for officers of the Eagles Auxiliary to February 8, at 7:30 p.m. at the Eagles Hall. All officers are asked to be present for ritual practice following the meeting. Car Accident Kills Youth HEPPNF.R. Ore. (AP). A car overturned on a wet highway near her Saturday night, killing Eernard Philip Doherty, 14, Echo, Ore. Police said the boy was pinned beneath the car when the vehicle veered off the highway and over turned in a roadside ditch. Mrs. Maude Hoslcy, 632 High Street, will be hostess at a 1:30 p.m. luncheon to members of the Happy Hour Club Tuesday, Feb ruary 9. Police Find Slain Farmer MADRAS (AP) - The beaten bodv of a farmer was found be side a road near here Sunday. The body was that of Gibson Moody, about 42, Warm Springs, and slate police said it appeared he was the victim of a murder Moody was beaten over the head repeatedly, "with what, we don't know," police said. Shirley Mayhew will conduct a class in round dancing at the Mer ry Mixers' Pelican City Hall to night at 8 p.m. Degree of Honor lodge meeting will be held Monday, February 8, at 8 p.m. Lost River Grange No. 846 will have its regular meeting Wednes day, February 10, in the hall at Olene. Members are urged to be present as there will be discus sion important to the matter of the railroad crossing at Olene. Reg ular card party will be Friday, February 12, at 8 p.m. Academy of Friendship, WOT.M will have its regular monthly meet ing Tuesday, February 9, at 8 p.m. in the Moose Hall. Members with old valentines, please bring them for display. OTI Faculty Wives will not have their meeting Tuesday, February 9, as scheduled, but will meet Tuesday, February 16. Francis Flowers, Klamath Coun ty Pomona master, urges all offi cers of the grange to be present at an all-day Pomona meeting Satur day, February 13, beginning at 10 a.m. in the Malin Grange Hall Malm will be host and Merrill, co- host. All grangers are invited. Valley Rental 1003 E. Main Hours For This Week Only 8:30 to 4:30 Congress Asked To Begin Hatfield Hits Gigantic Forest Program Two Injured State police said a car with three passengers skidded out of control early Sunday at the Malin Tulelake junction of Route 39, rolled over on its side, and rammed against a stump in a ditch. The car was driven by Otis No ble Meadcr, 2302 Heather Street who told officers he had recently completed a 7,000-mile trip with out incident. This incident occurred shortly before 2 a.m. Sunday on slick pavement. Two passengers, Mrs. Vernon Adler Meader, 40, and her daugh ter, Neola Jean Meader, were tak en by a passing motorist to Klam ath Valley Hospital where they .vere released. Meader sustained slight scratches, but did not go to the hospital, officers said. Mothers of Rainbow Girls, As sembly No. 57, will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Scottish Rite Temple Rainbow Girls, Assembly 57, will have their regular monthly meet ing at the same time, same place. There will be initiation practice af ter the meeting. All girls are urged to attend. WASHINGTON (API-Congress has been asked to provide a $22, 1,00,000 start on the biggest im provement program ever under taken in national forests. Forest Service spokesmen de scribed the program, which would cost more than a billion dollars over the nest 40 years, at a hear ing before a House Appropriations subcommittee. They requested $11,000,000 .vhich, along with $11,800,000 al ready available, would be used to get the program under way in the liscal year beginning July 1. The program was termed "Oper ation Multiple I'se" by Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Ervin L. Peterson in a statement read by Forest Service Chief Richard E. McArdle. Stressing a need lor conservation and development of the nation vast timber resources, vviucn arc expected to pay for the program Peterson said many other values would be produced. They include, he said, "water, which the nation is using in ever growing volume, grazing for do mestic animals, wild game sports, fishing, recreation and scenery. "Management's purpose is to provide the maximum attainable values when and where they arc wanted and needed and in the available combinations. "The basic policy of multiple use is to provide the widest range nf values from the forests for the greatest number of people . . . wc are calling the program Operation Multiple L'se because its purpose is to achieve full development of II the resources of the entire' na tional forest system." Peterson outlined an ambitious program for the next 10-15 years in the forests which cover 181 mil lion acres of land, mostly in the west. The highlights: Production of more and 'better water through intensive manage ment and protection of forest wa tersheds. This will involve, among other things, stabilization of 10,000 miles of gullies and stream chan nels, construction of dams for con trol of erosion of more than a mil lion acres of soil and water supply inventories. Construction of more than W0,- 000 housing units to meet the nteds of an expected 130 million annual recreational visits by 108J. Improvement of sanitation, clean up and salety facilities at recre ation areas. Improvement of food and cover on fi million acres ol wiiaiuc areas to provide better nunting and fishing. Improvement of 7,000 miles of fishing streams and 56,000 acres of lakes. More intensified management to provide better grazing for live stock on 68 million acres of forest rangeland. For example, there is a need now tor 18.000 miles ol fences and 9.500 water facilities, and control of poisonous plants on 4'2 million acres. About 90,000 miles of roads and 3,000 miles of trails should be built to gain access to timber, wage war on timber disease and bugs, and for the benefit of visitors. Congress is expected to be re ceptive to the forest service re quest for funds. Last year it ap propriated more money than the agency asked. FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth hav suffered real embarrassment because their plate dropped, slipped or wob bled at Just the wrong time. Do not live In fear of this happening to you. Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH. the alkaline (non-acid) powder, on your plates. Hold false teeth more firmly, so they eel more comfort able. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor breath '. Get PASTEETH at drug counters everywhere. MIDLAND Park Charges SALEM (AP A statement and activities of Gov. Mark Hat field during a recent visit to the RiTdsport Coos Bay area have been distorted by the chairman of the Lane County Taxpayers Assn., the governor said Satur day. Hatfield commented after a news story from Florence, Ore. quoicd association president John ayes as saying the board was "completely stunned" by a Hal field assertion the governor "could assure the people that his hill for the formation of an Ore gon Dunes Park would be passed by Congress and signed by the President." Hatfield quoted Hayes as hav ing written him recently: "We have complete confidence in your intention of protecting the rights of individuals most affected and if, in your opinion, a park such as you have suggested would bene fit the state, wc arc quite willing to bow to your opinion." "The new Hayes ' statement, said Hatfield, "is apparently based upon his present belief that his recent personal statement in support of our position is not ac ceptable to members of his as sociation and he has chosen to at tack the governor and the Com mittee on Natural Resources in an effort to save face." Trio Returns From Angling FORT KLAMATH February 4, three Fort Klamath residents, El more Nicholson, Harold Wimer and son, Don, returned from a steelhcad salmon fishing trip to the Illinois River near Grants Pass. While the Klamath Basin was visited by high winds and a heavy snowstorm, they said it lained hard and steadily at their fishing destination. Despite the in clement weather, the two younger members of the trio caught two fine steelhcad salmon in the riv er where Wimer Sr. had speared many salmon years ago, a method of fishing strictly illegal these days. Wimer, a pioneer resident of the Wood River Valley, went along on the trip primarily for the purpose of revisiting the scenes of hi: childhood. He is a native of Selma lour miles from the Illinois River where the fish were caught, and had not returned to his birthplace Irr more than 50 years until the recent trip. His family managed a hotel at Selma before moving to Fort Klamalh over halt a ccn lury ago. Wimer has mado his home here since that time. After the passage of 50 years, he said, he found little remaining at Selma of his boyhood memoriei of the town and its residents, but expressed pleasure in the trip and visit to his home of early days. He has operated the Fort Klam ath Garage since 1919. During his absence, his wife. Myrtle, who itstists in its management was in charge. Highest mountain neak in Ar- gentina is Aconcagua (22,834 feet). People 60 to 80 If You Will Simply Send Us Your Name And Address . . . we will explain how you can still apply for a $1,000 life insur ance policy to help take care of final expenses without burdening your family. You can handle the entire trans action bv mail with OLD AMERI CAN of KANSAS City. No obliga tion of any kind. No one will call on you. Tear out this ad and mail it to day witli your name, address and year of birth to Old American In surance Co.. 4000 Oak. Dept. L236B, Kansas City 12. Missouri. Adv. Midland Home Extension will meet Thursday at 10:30 . a.m. in the kitchen at the fairgrounds. Soups will be the project. Bring a soup bowl and a small fee to cover costs of materials. J. Henry Helser & Co. Inv.fttmrnt Mimrrrt Kstahllshrd 113'! 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