Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 16, 1960, Page 21, Image 21

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rtApM Seine- u mm 1
"Who gave you YOUR permanent?"
' -la w
e 1MO by MA, Im. TJ Rff. . ISt OK.
'I've got to buy birdseed again. That parakeet's
eating us out of house and home!"
Diversion
Of Rivers
Called For
. DENVER (AP) If the United
States can rocket a man to the,
moon, U can bring the Mississippi
and Columbia rivers to arid parts
of the west, the National Agricul
tural Credit Conference was told
Tuesday,
Wayne D. Criddie, Utah state
engineer, said this country must
put forth greater effort to provid
ing water where it Is most needed.
In a speech prepared for deliv
ery at the ninth annual confer
ence, Criddie said nature delivers1
moisture which, properly timed
and distributed, would meet vir
tually all needs of man. But the
engineer added: 'Our problem Is
not that there fan t enough water,
but that we do not think we have
the funds to develop it for use
where needed.
"I claim that if we have the
know-how and money to put man
on the moon, we can -also utilize,
the waters of the Columbia and
Mississippi rivers on the great
arid fan south and west of them.'
Criddie observed that water in
some parts of the nation is too
cheap, too plentiful to get good
usage.
"As water becomes more ex
pensive, it will be used more
sparingly and efficiently, but it
will be used.
"As our uses increase and the
cost rises, needed water will be
obtained and paid for regardless
of the pain td the buyer,
('riddle said the West's expe-
rience with water projects proves
that benefits are many and varied
embracing agriculture and Indus
ivy and thereby the region's en
tire economy.
STAR.
-Br CLAY R
M YW Doily tclivily Guide JK
According to fho Sfors.
To develop messoqe for Thuisdoy,
read words corresponding to number
of your Zodiac birth sign.
CV 3-15-35-41
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Good Adn (Ncui'rtl
If
Man Drops Keys,
Ends Up Back
In State Prison
RfVERSIDE, Calif. (VPD -;
Walter F. Howell, 40, dropped his
car keys Halloween night an ac
tion which soon led to his tin
masking as an escaped convict
from North Carolina.
Howell was held in jail for ex
tradition back to the North Caro
lina State Prison to serve out a
30-year sentence for killing a po
liceman in 1946 during a drunken
brawl,
He escaped from the prison in
1054, and two years ago moved
to California and married. He
since has been leading a law-abiding
life as an electrical mainte
nance worker.
But on Halloween . . .
"I had a few drinks, but wasn't
drunk," Howell said. 'I had my
car keys in one hand, and some
how I dropped them. An officer
am nlnncl liit I t ae f.itnl.1 inn i
ft . h
wiui my car aoor. tie smcucn niyi$7.50,
breath and booked me as a drunk.
"So I was fincernrintcd ."
in me routine i.ismon, lumens,
.1 f .1.!... ... ..
finccrm-ints were sent to t ip Knl:tign, $7 50.
in Washington, which notified po
lice he was wanted.
On Sunday he was arrested.
iiitiv.11 w 1110 am M ui 1 1 m wnu.l
I've led a sober life and mind
ed my own business but I knew!
that eventually I was going to go
back," Howell said. "I don't mind
personally. It's Just my wife.
"She didn't know I had been
in prison,"
NO SEGREGATION HERE
EL PASO, Tex. (UPII These
Ihrce signs were seen in the front
of an El Paso residence: "Reg
istered cockers for sale," "Keg
istered boxers for sale," "Mixed
puppies (or sale."
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P737 57
Latin Americans Give
Kennedy A Challenge
By PHIL NEWSOM
I PI Foreign Editor
One of the many suggestions
fired in the direction of President
elect Kennedy is that he under
take a pi e inauguration, get-
acquainted tour of Latin America
If he docs, there will be plenty to
occupy his attention, from Salva
dor, smallest of the Latin Repub
lics, to Brazil, the largest.
Excluding Cuba which must re
main the No. 1 hemispheric head
ache, the new president will find
U.S.-Latin American relations cm-
brace just about every problem in
the book.
Here are a few for instances:
A mixed civilian-military junta;
has just taken over Salvador,
nestled between Guatemala and
Honduras on the Pacific, after a
coup which toppled President Jose
Maria Lemus. The United States
has been slow to recognize the
new regime, apparently suspect
ing pro-Castro, leftist leanings.
The new government says it
has been convicted without a trial
and resentment against the United
States is mounting.
Nicaragua and Guatemala are
in trouble. Armed attacks by
rebels have occurred in each. Of
ficials charge the rebels wear
Fidel Castro uniforms and arc
supplied by Cuba.
States of siege have been im
posed in Nicaragua and Guate
mala. In Costa Rica, rebels killed the
national guard commander in a
l border skirmish. Costa Rican
troops have been fighting for
Court
KLAMATH FALLS
MUNICIPAL COURT
TRAFFIC
Jun Elizabeth Stainbrook, Improper
en turn, continued.
Helen Loralne Waters, failure to drive
on right side of street. $7. SO; no opera
tor'! license, $7.50, suspended.
Oliver R. Clawson, ran stop sign, $10.
Francis Leroy Hales, vehicle license
ex nirfld. 17.50.
Etta Welcome Edmunson, ran reo iigm,
ilO.
Gladys H. Bingham, expired vehicle li
cense. 17. SO.
Gary Ronald Van Ormen, improper ten
turn, $7.50.
Wilbur Henry Rogers, expired vehicle
license, 17.50.
Austin Richard Halden.'ran slop sign,
James w. waicon, ran nop sign, iu.
Arnold William McNeil, following too
closely, 110.
Leonard Leo carter, tenure to yiem
right of way, $10.
John Raymond acnuue, no ion nam.
$7.50.
Ralph Eugene Hoiunoswonn, violation
Of basic rule. 110.
Frank Thomas warotio, ran rea ugni,
$10.
Howard Gary curry, ran siop sign,
ThnmM MflUDIn, ran STOO nan, iu.
Millard Oscar Ward, failure to yield
rlnht of wav. 110.
Richard James Magulre, ran stop sign,
$10 or two days.
Robert Railliere. expired vehicle II-.
ranse. 17. SO, lusDendtd.
Knith Lerov K aler, failure to leave
name and address at scene of accident,
$25.
Warren Howard snouion, ran siop sign,
no.
Edward Leland Wheeler, Improper
nmOna. dismissed.
Isaac nenrv men, orunn unvn'w. w
line.
Andrew Jack-ion Ballard, drurm ariv
Ing, $?oo tor lei led.
ME I BR I I Live f WMRKHn I 9
Ernest J. Waite, $7.
Leonard Williamson, $1.
Arthur Dennis Guyer, $4.
Richard Joseph Mick, $10.
KLAMATH COUNTY
DISTRICT COURT
Hersthel P. Neuschwander, Improper
nasslna, $30.
Fred Alva Darby, disobeyed stop sign,
$7.50.
James Harry Parker, no vehicle license.
Theodore E. Hickman, no vehicle II
cense, $5.
Gregory ft. Thompson, no vehicle II
cene. $10.
Keegan K. Brent, no vehicle license. $5.
Louis Moulon, disobeyed stop slqn, $7.50.
George H. Anderson, disobeyed stop
slon, dismissed.
Kennein Leo r-arns, auooeywa iop
Slan. $7.50.
Friward G. Dtflvrla. disobeved stop sign,
Harry J. Allen, no vehicle license, $5
Leo D. Molafore, violate basic rule, $15.
Joseph H. Wright, improper tall light,
no
J(l E Montgomery, disobeyed stop
Edward Olds Morris, violate basic rule.
$10.
John O. Thompson, violate basic rule,
$35.
Georqe E- Thompson, disobeyed stop
115.
Maria. O
Paslege, lour in drivers
seat, 17.50.
Gerald E. Munger, no rear view mir
ror. $10.
Earth, Stars
APE MAN OF JAVA -ONE OF
THE EARLIEST KNOWN MEN
Near the end of the 19th century, a young
Dutch doctor, Eugene Dubois, had a hunch.
Java might be live place to hunt for the original
man, for that land had once been connected
to the Asiatic mainland and had escaped the
ice ages.
Amazingly enough, in 1891, Dubois actually
found the fossil he had dreamed of the skull
cap of a manlike creature never before seen.
A year later he found a complete human thigh
bone near the original find. On the basis of this,
he named it Puhocanfhropiw ereetus the erect
ape man.
It was the same old story: scientists were
skeptical. What did this amateur know? The.
skull and thigh obviously did not belong
together. As a result. Dubois put his ape man
away in a titJCrfifibox. It waa not unltl 1923, when
HERALD AND NEWS,
some time against forces planning
an attack on Nicaragua, long a
particular target of the Castro tion, and Donald Baldwin, Soil1
regime. Conservation Service, "Use of
In Venezuela. President Romulo Meadow Foxtail in a Grazing Pro
Betancourt'i three-party coalition gram for the Northwest," is to
seems on the verge of falling! be presented with colored slides
apart, partly because of economic at the annual fall meeting of the
difficulties and partly because of
divergent views toward Castro.
Betancourt himself is markedly
cool to the Cuban revolutionary
regime.
Mounting unrest plagues the
governments of Chile, Brazil and
Argentina.
A strike called to enforce de
mands for wage parity with the
armed services paralyzed Brazil's
transport system last week.
Expensive strikes also hit Ar
gentina and Chile where govern
mcnt austerity programs are un-
popular, ine strikes were sus-
piciously coincidental with Mos
cow's observance of the 43rd
anniversary of communism's
"October revolution."
To these situations may be
added increasing U.S. concern
over the enormous flow of Com
munist weapons to Cuba, rated
far above any normal defense re
quirements. It Is suspected that
some of these arms are intended
for other Latin American revolu
tionary groups.
Latin America hailed Kennedy's
election in the belief it heralded a
new era of "good-neighborliness,
But Latin Americans long have
been both suspicious and resentful
of their big northern neighbor,
and their attitude also will be one
of wait and see.
Records
Robert B,
F.ulkntr, dlsobeysd ttopijmi(. , . ' , ...
sign, $7.50.
Ann Elizabeth Walters, no vehicle li
cense, 15.
Cecil C. Geihl, overlenglh vehicle, 115.
Chester R. Jones, axle overload, $30.
Jesse Dean Nero, no operator's license.
suspenaea, continued
John Clifford Argelslnger, waste of I
game, svi.
warn F. Bryan, fall to dim headliahts,
$7.50.
Francis J. Kaiser, disobeved slon tion.
dismissed on motion of district attorney.
v. i mora i. auineriana, no operator's li
cense, dismissed on motion of district at
torney. Jay B. Willis, no declared weight re
ceipt, dismissed on motion of district at
torney. tins c. Brogdon, no operator's license.
dismissed on motion of district attorney.
Anarsa sanueios, morooer eft turn.
$7.50.
Carolyn Ann Wynant, violate basic
rule, $15.
Michael U. Carroll, disobeved stop sign.
$7.50. i
Clarissa Ann West, disobeyed stop sign,
$5.
Roy K. La Prarle, disobeyed stop sign,
$7.50. !
Douglas Edward Hickman, violate basic
rule, lis,
Donald T. Colwell, no PUC permit,
$25 suspended.
Edgar Hugh Murphy, violate basic rule.
$15.
Shirley Mae Heis, vlolele basic rule,
$15.
Klrby Lee Kindall, no horn, $7.50.
Gerald D, Matlern, Improper muffler,
dismissed.
Samuel Myrl Dowdy, no declared
weight receipt, dismissed.
Tommy Ray Harris, Improper muffler,
dismissed on motion of district attorney.
Scott A. Macmillan, violate basic rule.
dismissed motion of district attorney.
Donald R. Holland, no operator's li
cense, dismissed on motion of district at
torney.
George v. irons, no operator's license,
dismissed on motion of district attorney.
Boyd T. Bennett, violate basic rule.
dismissed on motion of district attorney.
James A. Harris, following too closely,
dismissed on motion ot district attorney.
James A. Webb, improper muffler, dis
missed on motion of district attorney.
Donnie Dean Heaion, violate basic rule,
$30.
Paul Arthur Jones, no operator'! li
cense, $5.
Jack V. Magnuson, no vehicle license,
$5. .
Robert Bates, truck speeding, $10.
Michael H. Heyer, violate basic rule,
$35. I
Shirley M. Perrell, no vehicle license.
$5.
Vernon A. Nushaumar, tandem axle ov
erload, $84.
Glen L. Englcman, combination over
load. $15.
Donald Lee Tlmerson, combination ov
erload and overlenglh load, $1,330, demur
rer filed.
Golda Vigna Ingram, fall to properly
tag deer, $25.
Jelferson Peter Alien, contributing To
dependency of minor, continued.
Leora Gail Rhodes, larceny, dismissed
on motion of district Attorney.
Trudy Ann Johnson, larceny, dismissed
on motion ot district attorney.
Vone Feliner, larceny, order held to
Or And lory.
Raymond Monroe Balrd. license sus
pended, dismissed on motion of district
attorney.
Martin Luiher Marlon, overlenglh load.
continued.
Frances Louise Peradli, violate basic
rule, $10.
and Man (15)
SKULL OF JAVA APE
MAN WAS RESTORED BY
FRANZ WEIDEN REICH.
PEKING MAN ISOUITE
SIMILAR AND PROBABLY
CLOSELY RELATED.
Klamath Falls, Ore. Wednesday, November 16, 1960
Farm Study
To Be Given
At Meeting
A paper prepared by A. R.
.Gross, Klamath Experiment Sta-
Pacific Northwest Section, Amer
ican Society of Range Manage
ment, Nov. 28-29 at Prineville.
Gene Cox, local soil conservation
service technician, who served
three years in Hawaii, will
present colored slides and a talk,
"Ranching in Hawaii."
Local members of the Ameri
can Society of Range Manage
ment planning to attend the meet
ing are Maude Liskey, Don Bald
win, Walt Risse and Gene Cox.
W. F. Currier, section chairman
in announcing plans for the meet
ing, said the Pacific Northwest
Section is the largest section of
the parent society with 310 mem
bers. Ranchers make up about
25 per cent of the membership.
More than 100 members from
Washington, Oregon and British
Columbia are expected to attend
the sessions
An outstanding group of ranch-'
ers, technicians, college profes
sors and business people will be
on the program as speakers.
The keynote address will be
given by Herb Pollard, well
known officer. First National
Bank, Lakeview. There will be a
banquet and dance Monday even
ing and a program for women at
tending has been arranged.
ENTERS NAVAL HOSPITAL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep.
Brent Spcnce, D-Ky., the oldest
memher nf the Hm
auiiuiicu w nit oeuiesua, im.t
Naval Hospital to speed his recov
ery from a cold. His office said
Tuesday the 85-year-old congress
man was expected to be dis
charged within the next day or
two.
True Sandman May Exist
On Undiscovered Planet
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - There
may be true "sandmen" on some;
yet undiscovered planets, a team
of University of Pennsylvania sci
entists said today.
The sandmen were envisioned
as living creatures having silicon
an essential constituent of sand
and rocks as their basic compo
nent, instead of carbon. The latter1
is the key element in the chemis-j
try of all life on earth.
Potato Crop
In State Down
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
With digging completed in most
areas, Oregon's fall potato crop
now is expected to be far below
last year's harvest, the U. S. De
partment of Agriculture said to
day. The department's test esti
mate placed the total crop at 4.
620.000 hundredweight. That is 5
per cent below the Oct. 1 estimate
and 21 per cent below the fall crop
of 1959.
SEARCH CALLED OKF
WILL1TS. Calif. (L'PD - A
search for two San Quentin
on camp inmates was called offjnext 150 years, he introduced into
Saturday when the men returned
to camp each carrying a boil
quel of rhododendrons.
R. E. Cole and Donald P. Hoi-.
brook explained they went flower
picking and were caught in a
cloudburst. Thcv took shelter be-
hind some rocks and didn't octets having an atmosphere of dif-
back to camp for two and
half hours.
Ape Men and Giants by Don Oakley and John Lane
PEKING MAN
opinions had changed, that he allowed him to
be viewed again.
Tho Java man was eventually redeemed by
discovery of a related type near Peking, China.
From 1929 until World War II, an international
team carried out excavations. Tragically, ex
cept for plaster casts, all the remains of this
vastly important Sinontliropus pe fcinorists
China Man of Feking were lost during the
evacuation after Pearl Harbor.
One of the strangest mysteries in the whole
story of man concerns giants. In 1935. a young
paleontologist, G. H. R. von Koenigswald, pur
chased three gigantic humanlike teeth in a
Chinese drug store in Hong Kong. iThc Chinese
had used powdered fossil bones as medicine
for generations.) Hesitantly, he coined the name
GiyaiUopuhtcus giant ape.
": .v .. . 1
Is h A . i&Hf -i
CUB SCOUTS OF PACK 3, Roosevelt School, are shown
demonstrating skits prepared tor Fire Prevention Month
and performed during the pack meeting on Thursday,
Oct. 20. As a reward for their outstanding tire skits and
fire evacuation charts of their homes, all members of the
pack were taken on a tour of the city fire department
and received a ride on the big department's ladder truck.
BLM Shows
Blacked West's Forests
In what veteran firefighters
have called the "worst fire sea
son in 30 years," 1,195 fires swept
across more than 335,900 acres
of federal lands in the West man
aged by the Bureau of Land Man
agement last summer, the De
partment of the Interior an
nounced recently.
Without the help of the very
latest fire fighting equipment and
'modern suppression
techniques,
i the losses could have been much
The researchers told about it in
a report prepared for the opening
of the autumn meeting of the Na
tional Academy of Sciences.
The team, headed by researcher
M. Abedini, also envisioned that
some day vitamins and hormones,
for use in medical fields, might
be prepared from sandy sub
stances. The Penn researchers said that
for the first time they have pre
pared new, simple silicon-containing
compounds which are closely
analgous in both chemical and
physical properties to a number
of familiar compounds based on
carbon.
One of them is a silicon-based
"ether" which is the exact coun
terpart of the widely known pain
killing compound except that it
contains atoms of the element
silicon instead of the usual atoms
of carbon.
The scientists said: "At the
present time, our knowledge of
these simple silicon compounds is
at the stage where carbon chemis
try was 150 years ago.
"Since all living substances con
tain both simule and complex car-
ibon compounds, it is somewhat
fascinating to wonder whether
pris-jsilicon compounds will, within the
living substances in place of anal
gous carbon compounds."
They added: "It is possible thai
living 'things,' with their chcmis -
try based on silicon instead of
carbon, may exist in some of the
billions of yet undiscovered plan-
one-jferent composition from that on
learth. "
USED FIRE
GIANT'S
JAW
ANDCHINA
A
MODERN
MAN'S JAW
WERE
Later In Java, von Koenigswald found a skull
identical to Dubois' original ape man, further
strengthening that creature's place in history
(now dated as living 500,000 years ago). But he
also unearthed several jaw fragments of two
different, huge beings which he called "Robust
Ape Man" and "Big Man of Old Java." The
latter apparently had twice the bulk of a gorilla.
There was no longer any doubt that giants
of some kind had once walked the earth.
The matter is still not settled as to whether
these giants were the ancestors of the Java and
China ape men, or whether they were strange,
freakish side branches. Only continued digging
by new generations of scientific detectives can
throw new light on this intriguing riddle or,
perhaps, uncaxih something even stranger.
NEXT: A Hoax and A Hope
Fires
higher, BLM Director
TTHwarrl
Woozley said.
The state hardest hit was Ida
ho, where 288 fires on BLM lands
burned nearly 121,000 acres, with
losses estimated to have exceeded
a million dollars.
Also badly hit was Oregon,
where 167 fires broke out during
July and August burning i''e,Qnllt On ISSUG
than 75,000 acres, most of it in
the eastern and southern parts of
the state.
Damage to western range and
forest lands from the devastating
fires this year led BLM and the
department to ask Congress for
a special one and one-half million
dollar fund with which to rush
needed rehabilitation work to pre
vent the winter rains and next
spring's melting snows from caus
ing serious floods and soil ero
sion, Director Woozley said. Con
gress appropriated $1,425,000.
Work on the areas burned over
last summer is well underway as
crews are working at top capa
city to get grass seed in the
ground and forest sites prepared
for spring tree planting before
winter sets in.
Fire conditions throughout many
parts of the West during 1960 set
the stage for a battle 'by BLM;
crews to gain quick control of,
raging fires and hold losses to a
minimum. As the fire fighting
forces of BLM were taxed to and
beyond capacity help was called
in from all available sources. Ma
jor support this year, Woozley
said, was given by State National
Guard units and the continued
use of aircraft to transport fire
fighters, haul supplies, and drop
fire retarding chemicals on par
ticularly dangerous fires.
Director Woozley took special
note ol the lact that two men
working under contract with BLM
lost their lives fighting a fire in
Idaho's Hell's Canyon when their
B-25 crashed as they were mak
ing a borate drop. The crash was
attributed to ruptured fuel lines.
Throughout the West last sum
mer more than a dozen men lost
ltheir lives fighting fire. In addi
tion, Woozley said, many millions
of dollars worth of valuable nat
ural resources went up in smoke.
BLM's fire suppression costs
amounted to more than three mil
lion dollars.
OF JAVA
THERE GIANTS "3
IN THOSE DAYS?
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL
NO. 0 ft PKoBA I B
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OP
THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR KLAMATH COUNTY
In the Matter of the Estate
Of
MMA VIOLA DOW, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that I have been
appointed Executor of the estate of
Emma Viola Do. deceased, an per-
nnt having claims saamit said estate
.r. rmiiirtrf in nrrunt them to me,
with proper vouchers, at tne oice ot
Ganong & Ganong, Ftrst Federal Build
ing, Klamath Falls, Oregon, within six
months from November 9, I960, which is
the date of first publication o mis no
tice.
George A. Dow, Executor
Ganong A Ganong
Attorneys for Executor
NO. Ml, NOV. , 1ft 23, JU.
NOTICE OP SHERIFF'S SALE
ftn nrcrnhir S. 1960, at the hour of
ifi-oo a.m. at the front door ot the Klam-,
ath County Courthouse in Kiamam t-aiis,
Oregon, I will sell at auction to the
highest bidder for cash the following de
scribed real property situated In Klamath
County, Oregon, to-wlt:
All ot Lots it, ii, a new.!
18, Township 35 South, Range 7 E W M.
Ivina East of the centerline of the old
Dalles-California Highway, and that por
tion of said Lot 25 which is oounaea on
the South by a line parallel to and o
feet North of the South boundary line
of said Lot; on the West by Agency
Lake; on the North by a line parallel
in nrt 90 feet North of said South boun
dary line of said Lot, and on me nasi
by the centerline of said 010 uaues-
Californla Hignway.
i made under Execution Is
sued out of the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for the County of Klamath to:
me directed, in the action at law No.
60-59, Paul D. Hackett and Daisy c.
Hackett, husband and wife, doing busi
ness as Esplanade Court, Plaintiffs, vs.
t 14a emit arid flAIV fc. I
Clarice Lotches and Martin
Lotches,
husband and wife. Defendants.
J. M. Britton
Sheriff of Klamath County, Oregon
By May Sloman
Deputy
No. 556, Nov. 9, 16, 23, 30.
NO. 60-249 EQUITY
NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR KLAMATH COUNTY
NELLIE L. SIMMONS and Wm. E.
SIMMONS, her husband; HARRY L.
BRAY and EDITH L. BRAY, his wife;
GEORGE BRAY and PAT BRAY, his
wife; THOMAS E. BRAY and IONA
rdav. hit wife; and EVELYN M. AN-
HRPW5 and JOE ANDREWS, her hus-
band. Plaintiffs, vs. ALILfc w. HtLsun
nd NELS NELSON, her husband; WAL-
. tcd mj rd&v nri FLORENCE M,
BRAY, his wife; and MARJOKi t WAL
TERS, Defendants.
Notice is hereby given that the under
ionpd J. M. Britton, as Referee, will
on November 25, I960, at 10 A.M. at the
front door ot the courtly couri nouw i
Klamath Falls, Oregon, sell af public auc
tion for cash the following described real
property, lo-wit:
UN Committee
r
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP)
The U.N. Congo advisory com-;
mittee remained split today on
what to do about dispatching a1
conciliation commission to the cha-!
otic African state.
Informed sources said Secre
tary-General Dag Hammarskjold's
18-member committee failed alter
haggling for four hours Monday
night to decide when to send its
mission to the new Alncan re
public to try to bring warring fac
tions together. It will meet again
Wednesday.
One element in the committee
it is reported, contends there is
no sense in sending a 15-member
mission all the way to Africa to
try to bring President Joseph
Kasavubu and his arch rival, de-
posed Premier Patrice Lumumba,
together since Kasavubu is in New
York.
The Congolese president Camclde'td,"n'1 presented for linal settlement,
. . t ,u r, iflntl ',,ed in ,ne Circuit Court ol tho
here last week to Claim tne LOn-, stale ol Oregon, for Klamath County, her
oa'o omntv spat in the General I "nal ccount of her administration of
gos empty seal in ne uliuioi !Bd tsl41t Jnl sJjd Cour) hn (ji(e(J
Assembly. The United States put Tuesday the in day of December 1960.
a rocnlnlinn thronr thp rredpn- ' ,he 01 10 0'cl:1' in ,re forenoon
a resolution inrougn me titui-n-i0( 0ay, ,he courtroom in too
tials committee naming Kasavubu
.I rt j,i,:
as head of the Congo delegation.
but the recommendation is expect
ed to run into bitter opposition in
the assembly where the Soviet!
bloc and many Asian-African
states favor Lumumba.
Some members of the commit
tee are said to favor bringing Lu-
l , Vo,u v.rl ,.l,,lo Lien ' 'ne "alter ot the Estate of MAR.
mumba to tew mk while ia?a- caret childers. Deceased,
vubu is here and trv to effect a notice is hereby given that th
... . , .. I undersigned, B. H. Pickett has been, by
reconciliation On the Spot. llllS an order of the Circuit Court of the Slata
suggestion did not gain mucliK 0rcgn ,or Klam,,n Coun,v' 0DO'",ed
, . r . .. ladministrator of tha estate of Marqaref
headway. UllOrmantS Said. Childers. deceased, and that Letters of
i- -, j c, :i i -....4 i Administration have been issued to him.
The United States, it IS report- All persons having claims against said
ed wants the assembly to meet
' , j . i -
this week on the credentials issue,
hut hn nnl marlp anv move tn rail
am nas not maae any move io idii
for a plenary meeting.
Western delegates believe they
can muster enougn support irom
the Latin American bloc and
members of the African French
community to seat Kasavubu.
The United States could ran into
another defeat, however, if the 45
Asian-African nations team up
... , .... Li
w ith the nine-nation Soviet bloc as
they d d asl week when they ad-
j u .
JOUmed the Congo, debate 0er
Ampriran nnnnsition
American opposition.
Jaia Wachtlku. chief of the Ni.'court. lor Thursday, the 1st day ol De.
J . . . . . :cember, I960, al 10 o'clock a m., of said
gerian delegation, nas maae
known he would oppose the ere-
dentials committees recommen-
i v nil...
nihor
umiuil lu Sfdl nusinuvu. wiuci
frican delegates have indicated
privately that, if the issue is
brought to the assembly floor.
they will vols for another post
ponement.
Out Of State
Men Dominate
CORVALLIS (AP) A SUI'VeV al
rir Cm. f-ll-- .!,.. '.I...
Oregon Stale College shows that
45 per, cent of the forestry stu -
r
dents are from out of state.
Slates with the largest student!
represenlalion in order are Cali-
Washington, New York.
iOhio. Idaho. Hawaii and Kansas. Jf"", o",""'" ' E'"' Kl,m
School employment records! notice' is hereby given ttt i
show that about one-third of the1"'",.0!"" ,wth "J".." !'"""" "
'out-of-state Students accept fores-
llrv unnUmMl uilhin Ctrnrr, ift.
" 3 Mllfl'MI.I " " .VfaV,,, -
er graduation.
William P. Wheeler, college iw.EV FJSZ!!"
sonnel director for forestrv. said . nKry satmv a luogment,
, , ,M , .- with interest and costs, and accruing;
more than 100 new foresters are costs. me onest t.ai,
needed each year within the st.ito; DTED ; day odooer. ltu,
and the school graduates about 60 sheriff
,wcljr.ar. No i'VT'Cn
LEGAL NOTICI
1
r PARCEL ONE: Lots 4 and l M HOC
IS of First Addition ra oonanie;
PARCEL TWO: Commencing at a point
In the Southeasterly line of Block If of
First Addition to Bonanza, which ponf
is In the Intersection of the southeasterly
line of said Block 12 with the cenlerlme
of the southerly wail of the building lo
cated on the premises herein described
and which said point is N. 33 degrees
East S8' tV. more or less, from the
Southeast corenr ot said Block 13; thence
'continuing N. 33
degrees East along
me sam wumwsr
ne ot said Bioctc 12,
31' eV, more or less, to the north lin
of said building and being the east and
west centerline of said Block 13; thence ,
Westerly parallel with the south line of
said block a distance of 174.74 feeti
thence south 36' 4'i"; thence Edit to the
place ot beginning, being property de
scribed In deed recorded in Vol. 163
page 253, Klamath County Deed Records
Said sale is made pursuant to decree
In the above entitled suit made and tn
tered on October 30, 1960.
J. M. Br i Hon
Referee
No. 938, Oct. 26, Nov. 1, 9, 16.
NOTICE TO CREOITOR5.
In the Circuit Court for Klamath Coun
ty.
In the Matter ot the Estate of Charle
M. Bennett, Deceased.
The undersigned has been appointed)
by said court administrator of said es
tate. Notice is hereby given to the credi
tors of decedent to present their claims
duly verified as by law required, within
six months after the first publication of
this notice, to the undersigned at trie
law office of A. C. Yaden, 411 Main
Street. Klamath Falls, Oregon.
Dated and first published this 16th day
of November, I960.
Charles T. Bennett, Administrator.
No. 572, Nov. 16. 23, 30, Dec. 7.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby given that at the hour
of 10:0 o'clock A.M. on the 7th day of
December, i960, In the County Court Of
fice ot the Klamath County Court Hous
Klamath Falls, Oregon, the Count
Court ot said County will hold a publid
hearing on the Klamath County Subdivi
sion Ordinance proposed for all the are
contained in said County, to which hear
ing is invited and at which any person)
or party may be heard In support of
or in opposition to, said Subdivision Or
dlnance.
There Is on tile In the office ot the
Clerk ot said County a copy of the Klam
ath County Subdivision Ordinance. Copies
of said Subdivision Ordinance have also
been placed with the Klamath Count'
Chamber of Commerce, the Labor Tem
ple of Klamath Falls, the Chairman of
the Klamath Falls Realty Board, the Her
ald and News, the Klamath Community
-u ...s v,UWmr jumho ior
K'amatn Loumy, uregon.
Done at the direction of the Klamath
County Court this 2nd day of November
1960.
Charles F. DeLap
Clerk for Klamath County, Oregon
No. 565, Nov. 16, 23 and 30.
NOTICE OF SALE OF
REAL PROPERTY FOR DELINQUENT
IMPROVEMENT ASSESSMENT
Bv virtue ol a Warrant issued by tht
Recorder of the City ot Klamath Falls.
Oregon, dated the 27th day of October.
A.O. I960, and to me directed, notice is
hereby given that I have levied upon th
following-described real property, to-wit:
Lot eighteen (L.18) Block eight (Blk.9)
Eldorado Addition, lo the City of Klam.
lath Falls, Klamath County, Oregon, taken
ana levieo upon as tne property or
Frank A. Blackmer and Faye E. Black
mer, in satisfaction of a certain improve,
ment lien created and docketed by tho
City of Klamath Falls, Oregon, tor a
proportionate shara of the cost of lm
proving the streets In the 133 Improve
ment unit ot said Cilv, which said lien
lis docketed In Volume II of the Lien
Docket of said City at page S4 thereof
on the date of Auqust 14th. A D. 1957,
in the sum ot $957.06, plus Interest there,
on In the sum of Sloe. 87. Notice is also
hereby given that the undersigned will,
on the 2nd. day of December A.D. 1960,
at the hour of ten o'clock A.M. of said
day, at the front door of the City Hall
in said City, sell at public auction to
ttie highest bidder lor cash in hand,
the aloremenlioncd and described real
property, or so much thereof as may
be necessary to satisfy the above lien
in the sum of $1,065.93, together with
interest thereon al the rale ot 6 per
cent per annum from the 27lh. day of
October A.D. 1960, and together with tha
costs and disbursements of sale hereun
der.
CHAS. A. HOWARD
Chief of Police of the City of
Klamath Falls. Oregon.
No. 543, NOV. 2, 9, 16, 23, 30.
NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT
OF FINAL ACCOUNT
Notice is hereby given that Pearl I.
Yorkelnnd. executrix ol the estate of
manes Yorke and. defeated. Iu r.n.
county court House. Kiamam Fans, ore-
son, as the time and place tor hearino
Elections. If any, to said account, and
the settlement thereof.
Dated this 2Bth day of October, 1
Pearl I. Yorkeland,
Executrix of the estate of
No. m Nov.
Charles Yorkeland. Deceased.
2. 9, 16, 22.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THB
STATE OF OREGON
FOR KLAMATH COUNTY
"'"' "' hereB not.hed to present ine
same, duly verified and with proper
vouchers, to the undersigned at 53s Main
5,ree'' K'enie'h Fa"s. Oregon, within si
(6) mont)J lrom h ajle o )ht (.rsf
publication of this notice, which publlca-
u, la ,,'b nu uy oi novemoer, ivoo.
B. H. Pickett
Administrator of tha Estate of
Margaret Childers, deceased.
MAXWELL
J." 'S,m""l,",'r
Klamath Falls. Oregon.
No. 547 Nov. 2. 9, 16, 2.
NOTICE OF HEARIN9
OF FINAL ACCOUNT
Notice is hereby given that George I.
nrivni. cetumr 01 ine tsiaie ot Ann.
et,e v. Writ,M, deceased, having i.i.d
,h' 'rl '"e Orcu.t court ot mo
s"" " Oiec-on 0r Klamalh County, hu
Final Account of the administration of
'" ,r,e hearing of the lama
hwi ti
day, at the court room of said court
i" ,.h"ur'1ou' Kiamath f.iii, ore.
gon: and all persons Interested In said
estale are notified to aooear and show
cause
"use. it any, why the said account
Dated mis aisi day ot October, i960.
Dated this 31sl day of October,
Geo. J. Wngnt
Executor ol said Estate
No. 551, Nov. 2. 9, 16, 23.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL PROPERTY
Under and bv virtue of an execution
Issued out of the Circuit Court ot tha
County ol Klamath, stale of Oregon. In
I an action in the Klamalh County. Ore.
gon District Court, No. 60-729 L, wherein
H M Moorhead was plaintiff and Bert
j Hamilton and Melva Hamilton, husband
and wile, were defendants, upon a ludg.
ment rendered on the 20th flay of Octc-
Der, i?60, in favor ol said plaintiff and
'oinst said defendants, lor the sum of
NINE HUNDRED AND NO-100THS DOL.
lars iswoooi. current iawiui money of
i'.h yni"? s''"" 01 rica, with in.
teres! and costs. nri l,.r,;h.. ,. .
Klamalh County. Oregon Circuit Court on
October 2'. 1960. I have this dav levied
uoon all tn. nnnt i.m. . ....
'erest ot sad defendants m and 10 tf
! 'Th, Z.r,V, o, r,T Z',.ir,
l" Klamath Count, Court House, sell af
euo'ic aucnon,
ent lawful money
Amenca. all tn
0 ,f y
"-' '
cle.m and interest of sa d