Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 06, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    H AMBER
OMMENTS
by GEORGE T. CALLISON
Manager
KLAMATH COUNTY CiUMKI OF COMMERCt
Wilh the holidays now well out
of the way, chamber activities
again begin to pick up tempo.
The Board of Directors will hald
Its monthly policy meeting Tues
day evening at 7:30 at the cham
ber offices, and the eekly lunch
eon meetings of the board, open
to all chamber members, will re
sume Wednesday noon at the Pel
ican Cafe.
On Thursday afternoon the Up
per Klamath Lake - Recreation
Committee has scheduled anoth
er meeting to give further con
sideration to recommendations it
has received relative to the al
leged depletion of the mule deer
herd in Klamath County.
- The Industrial Development
Committee, which has held a num
ber of meetings right through the
holiday season, will hold its next
meeting on Thursday. Jan. 31. At
that time it will hear from the
industrial development manager
of a major utility, as well as
from a representative of the State
Department of Planning and De
velopment, on various aspects in
volved in the establishment of an
industrial development corpora
tion. The Pacific Northwest Travel
Association, of which the cham
ber is a member, holds its annu
al winter board meeting in Spo
kane Jan. 19 and 20. The writer,
or some other representative of
tlie chamber will, in all probabil
ity, attend (his all-important meet
ing of PNTA. at which a deter
mination is made regarding the
travel editors to be invited to
tour Oregon next summer, and
final plans are made for the as
sociation's booth at seven major
travel shows to be held between
now and late spring.
The importance of this chamber
oriented function can not be over
emphasized -in view of the fact
that spending by out-of-state tour'
ists in Oregon last year reached
an all-time high of $217 million
the best educated guess as to
Klamath County's share of this
tourist income would place it be
tween $13 million and $15 million
a sizable and significant "in
dustry" in anybody's book.
Chamber presidents and manag
en from Oregon, Washington and
Idaho will converge on the Mult-!
nomah Hotel in Portland Feb
3, 4. and S for the annual mid
winter conference. This yearly op
portunity to get together with oth
er chamber people from the
Northwest for an exchange of:
ideas always proves to be stimu
lating. Bill Bird, dynamic insur
ance company executive from
San Francisco (the chamber's an
nual meeting speaker of I960'.
Harry Kruz. general manager of
the Long Beach, Calif., Chamber
of Commerce, and Ron Bailey,
manager. Western Division Cham
ber of Commerce of the United
Stales, as the principal, partici
pants in the program, give
promise that this winter's session
will be no exception.
By W.
THE DOCTOR'S MAILBAQ
Food Allergies Can
Be Serious Problem
variable. Given the same cause.
they are more severe in one per
son than in another and they
may be more severe at one time
than at another in the same per
son. That is because other fac
tors such as fatigue, a superim
posco. iniectious disease like a
cold, or one s emotional state
may influence the severity.
Also, cooking may destroy all or
part of the allergen so that a
person who cannot eat raw straw
berries may be able to eat straw
berry jam without any bad result.
In making this search most
doctors have come to place lit
tie or no reliance on skin tests al
though skin testing is still a valu
able means of determining the
cause of allergies due to pollens
and other inhaled allergens. Fi
nallv if you are found to have
an allergy to a certain food this
does not mean that you must
forever avoid this food. Many
persons after avoiding an offend
ing ocd for several years find
that they can tolerate small
amounts at rare intervals when
they are in good health.
C. BRAXDSTADT. M.D.
Written for
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
"It must have been something I
ate'' has been the cry of ailing
man for thousands of years. But
even if his symptoms, whatever
they happened to be. were due to
some food, that docs not mean, as
so many seem to think, that the
victim is allergic to that food.
The food may have been spoiled
or it may have been a food that
is naturally irritating to the lin
ing of the digestive tract when
taken in a large amount. True
food allergy, like food poisoning,
may cause vomiting or diarrhea
but in the allergic person a food
that is not spoiled or naturally ir
ritating may also cause a variety
of other manifestations including
asthma, nasal congestion, hives,
and eczema.
When a food allergy is sus
pected every effort should be
made to determine what food is
at fault. This is not always easy
I knew a man who got sick
every time his wife gave him
a certain brand of clam chow
der. For years thereafter he avoid
ed clams. One day his craving
cot the better of him and he
ate some steamed clams. There
was no reaction. After a pain
slaking study it was found that he
was allergic to par'ic which he
had never knowingly used. A
tmall amount of garlic was al
ways present in the canned chowder."-
It was no hardship for him
. to give up garlic but he still has
to be careful about eating many
commercially prepared foods that
may have garlic added.
Tins points up a serious prob
lem for many persons who have
an allergy to one particular food.
With modern packaging it is often
impossible to know what you are
eatinz. For most people the list-Checks during October
ing of ingredients on the label is
sufficiently detailed but not for
persons with some types of food
allergy. Many a label after listinc
the main components simply adds
"and spices " If one of the added
spices is mustard some persons
who eat the product will have
another of those nasty upsets and
will not know why.
Frequcnlly a person who is al
lergic to one plant food is also
allergic to other foods of the same
family and for this reason it is
well to know, for example, that
In addition to plums, gages,
prunes, peaches, apricots, and
nectarines this family includes
cherries and almonds.
The important thing is to dis
cover the related plants where
the relationship i. not obvious.
On the other hand persons who
are allergic to shellfish ia misno
mer' are not allergic to fish be
cause there is no true family
relationship.
Allergic reactions are highly
Hold Sought
On Gillespie
The sheriff s office has request
ed Portland police to learn the
name of the Nevada city where
Robert N. Gillespie. 23, has been
apprehended on a charge of lar-
cenv of an automobile, the Her
aid and News learned Friday
Deputy Lou Bogart said the
sheriff's office would place a hold
on Gillespie, sought here on charg
es of issuing four worthless
w hen his
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Fills, Ore.
Sunday, January 6, 1963
PAGE J-A
-EM i C 4. -S C.k .
yT:y Jftj i
:ta-:y L." f ill J
- - -: . i' - -v a & .. sv. , . a
r If I I 1
aw
L . .Asm "9
DYSTROPHY DRIVE The Klamath County muscular dystrophy drive, which ended
Dec. 13, added $202.93 to the treasury of the Muscular Dystrophy Association of
America. Local organization officials and workers who assembled recently to tabulate
the final results of the canister and coffee hour collections included, seated from
left, Ina Lilly, Venture Club, and Mrs. Edna Bowman, treasurer. Standing, John Heil
bronner, chairman; Everett Ball, assistant treasurer; Mrs. Catherine Shaw, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority; Carolyn Ball, Venture Club, and Anna Marie Eck, Venture Club president.
asi-West Sfiil Differ On Arms Cut
WASHINGTON (UPI - The
change in the negotiating line-ups
is unlikely to break the deadlock
in the 18-nation East-West disarm
ament ccnlerence in Geneva.
The United States and its Allies
still refuse to gamble their secur
ity in anything less than inspected
arms reduction, lliey are even
more confirmed in this belief as
a result of the Cuban missile af
fair.
But the Soviet Union remains
as adamant as ever in its rejee
lion of anv international verifies
tion of disarmament.
When the conference reconvenes
on Jan. 13, the United States will
be represented by a new chief
negotiator, to succeed veteran
cold war diplomat Arthur H. Dean1
whose resignation alter two years
on the job without pay was re
vealed Friday.
Russia probably will replace
Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian
Zorin in the disarmament job
he was also replaced as chief of
the Soviet delegation to the I nit
ed Nations. Zorin left New York
for Moscow Friday.
The ;"-ee,t conference in Ge
neva began in lnfil after Presi
dent Kennedy took office and it
is the administration's hope that
it can remain in being until sig
nificant disarmament is achieved.
But at the moment there is little
hope of early agreement on even
pre-disarmament measures surh
as a treaty to continue to keep
pace free of nuclear weapons.
Eight neutral governments, arc
participating in the Geneva con
ference but have little influence
on its course, which is decided by
the two nuclear giants who also
act as permanent co-chairman.
Dean and Zorin. both of whom
have represented their govern
ments in difficult situations (or
many years, have negotiated in
Geneva during the last two years
without substantial progress.
Dean has been identified with
tlie Anglo-American "hard line'
on test ban inspection, a position
which the Soviets have rejected
It was felt in Geneva that a new
negotiator would begin new efforts
for a test ban treaty with a psy
chological advanlage.
Research Chief
Resigns Post
BEAVERTON UPI Dr. Don
aid Pickering, director of the Ore
gon Regional Primate Research
Center here, resigned Saturday
effecLive immediately.
Dr. Pickering said he could no
longer "accept the responsibility
for the operation of the center
without the necessary authority.'
He said he would continue
principal investigator and senior
scientist to fulfill obligations un
dor existing grants
He announced his resignation in
an open letter to John C. Higgins
president, board of trustee. Mcdi
cal Research Foundation of Ore
gon. Inc
He noted a "present administra
whereabouts become known. live catterr. wun us iacK oi com-
Gillespie is alleged to have is- " r
sued the worthless checks while 3 TT,', . ,u"
he was employed by a Roseburglmo?ma'e..u i V . ' 7 Z
ronfinc comnanv on . ioh at lheluerl-v
Adrian Fisher, deputy director
of the Arms Control and Disarm
ament Agency, has been men-!
tioned as possible successor to
Dean.
Reports that Dean mav be on
the way out as part of a com
promise to get the disarmament
talks going have been circulated
in Geneva lor several weeks.
The neutrals present have been
of use to the United States main
ly as a means of getting at world
public opinion in the uncommitted
ortions of the world.
The Cuban affair, American dis
armament experts believe, has
made it less likely that the Rus
sians will accept disarmament in
the near future. The combination
of Soviet defeat in the Cuban af
fair plus the Moscow-Peking feud
makes it apparent Russia will bo
reluctant to strike any sort of
arms reduction agreement with
the West.
Pendergrass
Rites Slated
China Isolation Seen Aim Of Nikita
MOSCOW (UPD-Premier Niki
ta S. Khrushchev may turn his
Berlin trip this month into a
Communist summit conference
aimed at further isolating Red
China from the rest of the Com
munist bloc. Eastern European
sources said Saturday.
Russia announced the trip un
usual. y far in advance sliortlv
after Khrushchev had conferred
with newly arrived Chinese Am
bassador Pantsu-li but there was
no indication yet that Chinese
Communist leader Mao Tze-tung
or Premier Chou En-lai would go
to Berlin.
East European sources express
belief tlie Siuo-Soviet differences
might even overshadow the prob
lem of Berlin itself, although
Khrushchev is expected tu use his
stay there to launch a new diplo
matic offensive for some kind of
Gregory Trial Expected
To Conclude On Monday
The trial of Raymond Orville
Gregory, 26, accused of contribut
ing to the delinquency of a 14-
year - old K 1 a m a t h Falls girl.
is expected to conclude sometime
Monday when the case w ill enter
its third dav in the circuit court
of Judge David R. Vandenberg.
During court proceedings early-
Friday, the attorneys for the de
fense and the state selected tlie
remaining members of tlie jury
which will judge whether Greg
ory is guilty of providing beer to
the juvenile and taking her out of
the state w ithout her parents' con
sent.
In testimony following the im
paneling of the jury. District At
torney Dale Crabtree elicited
from the girl involved in the crim
inal action an account of the in
cidents which led to Gregory's
indictment.
She told the jury that she left
a parly during the evening of
Mrs. Driscoll
Funeral Monday
A Requiem Mass will be held
for Mrs. Lola Driscoll Monday.
Jan. 7, at 9:30 a m. at Sacred
Heart Church. Final rites will be
in Mt. Calvary Cemetery. Recita
tion of the Holy Rosary will fe
at O'Hair's Memorial Chapel at
8 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 6.
Pallbearers will be Dick Hen-
zcl, Floyd Stone, Judge D. R.
Vandenberg, Clarence Humble.
Orth Sisemorc, John D. O'Connor.
The office of Driscoll and Padgett
will be closed Monday.
Oct. 2 and accompanied Gregory
and Simon Herrera, 19, to Bly
w here the trio spent the night in a
cabin rented by Herrcra's brother,!
Sam. The following morning shei
and Gregory left Bly for Healds
burg, Calif., by way of Lakeview,
in the defendant's automobile, the
girl stated. In earlier testimony,
she established that Gregory had
given her several bottles of beer
while tlie three people were en
route to Bly.
Later in the trial, Herrera de
nied that Gregory had offered
beer to the juvenile. He slated
that she drank from several bot
tles of beer without prompting
from either himself or Gregory.
East-West agreement on the city's
luture.
Allies May Come
There were indicaiions Khrush
chev might be joined at the East
German party congress by his
East European allies Communist
bosses Wladislaw Gomulka of Po
land, Janos Kadar of Hungary,
Antonin Novotny of Czechoslovakia
Todor Zhivkov of Bulgaria and
Uheorghe Gheorghiu-Dcj of Ro
mania. There was no official announce
ment as to who would head the
East bloc delegations but usually
reliable Communist informants!
here said those sent might be "of
equal importance" to tlie top level
Soviet delegation.
Khrushchev laid down a chal
lenge to the Chinese Friday when
lie announced he would head the
Soviet delegation in his capacity
of first secretary of tlie Central
Committee of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union.
The Premier's presence at the
East German meeting, it was be
lieved, leaves the Chinese with
the choice of avoiding a head-on
clash over the Peking-Moscow
ideologicial difference or meeting
it head-on by sending Mao or
Chou.
Avowed Pplicy
The ideological differences cen
ter on Khrushchev's avowed poli
cy of "peaceful co-existence" and
the belief that war between Com
munist and capitalistic nations is
not Inevitable. Mao holds that
such a war is inevitable and even
desirable in belief the Chinese
masses would survive and that
any other course is revisionism
of the Marx-Lenin doctrine. Pek
ing, for example, thought the So
viet backdown on Cuba was a
"Munich-type appeasement."
Recent Communist Party con
gresses in European countries, in
cluding Italy and France, have
turned into a public forum for the
debate on the Peking-Moscow dif
ferences. Western diplomats here
expected the East German meet
ing to follow suit with Khrush
chev himself probably leading the
offensive.
Free Calendars
of
Lyle Kellstrom's
M. L. JOHNSON Agency
434 Main
Your utablt discards will help
ut 10 help otherf. Don't throw
'em away.
CALL:
The SALVATION ARMY
THRIFT STORE
till i Klftmftth TU 4-6841
Funeral services for Mr:'. Ten-
nie Jane Pendergrass, fi9, a resi
dent of Klamath Falls for 16:
years, will be at 3 Jl p.m. Mon
day. Jan. 7, from Calvary Bap
tist Church. Rev. Ferris Wynn
will officiate. Final rites will be
in Klamath Memorial Park with
Ward's Klamath Funeral Home
in charge. Mrs. Pendergrass died
at Hillside Hospital Jan. S.
Survivors include the widower.
Henry B. Pendergrass, Klamath
Falls; two sons. Elmer. Klamath
Falls, and Henry of Lakeview;
daughters. Ruby Wheeler, Klam
ath Falls, Kut h Ussery, Lakeview,
Florine Whilmire. Greenville.
Calif.. Margie Robertson. Turlock.
Calif.; sisters, Maudie Jones. Por
terville. Calif. Zoe Hunnicutt.
West Covina. Calif., Georgia Ca
singer, Allie Ferguson, and broth
er. Don Harvill: all of Russcll
ville. Ark.
CAP Meeting
Dated Monday
A meeting of the Civil Air Pa
trol w ill be held Monday evening
at the CAP headquarters in the
Summers Lane School building.
Eight new cadets have been
recruited for the CAP and
seven more are needed to com
plete the 19M roster, according
to Capt. Merille Jackson. Those
interested in joining arc invited
to the Monday night meeting.
Kidnap, Rape
Charge Filed
PORTLAND lUPll-Charges of
kidnaping and rape were filed
here Friday against Curtis Lee
Munson, 34, of Portland.
Munson is accused of abducting
and attacking a 29-ycar-old mar
ried secretary Wednesday.
BELGRADE lUPP-U. S. Am
bassador George Kennan left
Saturday for Washington for regu
lar consultations. He will be gone
two weeks.
SAVE WITH
A BIG-Y'S WISE BUYS! A
jir ftA hkt' I 1
'j Family Size jjj I
Gleem Toothpaste 0)
Mllll Sm I IU.MW wi vivuiieis m Al
L g9c -Jl
Reg. 83c -,Jr
WANTED!!
Cnmtr nnki Bftit
Srlrnce fiction Book!
IrniriPi' ilft Kheippt
inri honk (.vrhangr
At Nw l.wlln l Klamith
Driscoll & Padgett
Will Be Closed
Monday Morning
In Respect to
Mrs. James H. Driscoll
Oregon Technical Institute cam
pus.
Sheriff's records state that Gil
lespie rented a room at 514 Wal
nut Street and paid his rent with
a worthless check in the amount
of ik. Anna Francis, owner of the
rooming house, told Sheriff "Red"
Britton that she went to Gilles
pie s room alter the check
center . .
He said there have been delays
of more than a year in approval
by the dean of tlie Medical School
on budgetary proposals.
BAMAKO. Mall U'PI - The
Soviet Union and Mali Saturday
signed in agreement under which
tlie Soviets will provide the Afn
bounced and found Die tenant hadjean country with free technical
3
'III I'.li1"!"
fflMmm
mmm
left with his belongings. j
Gillespie is also charged with
issuing fictitious checks to two
service stations in the amounts
of K) and $10. and another to a
restaurant in the amount of $14.
The sheriff's office learned
from Portland police Friday that
Gillespie had been arrested some
where in Nevada for the felony ol
auto theft, but could not providr
other details.
assistance and schools.
M
L,
4f
i Lxut-to-L6aa.
i NEWSPAPERS
'p.
TRY IT
AT THI
LUCCA
CAFE
Wotld FQmouS'Delicioui
BROASTED
CHICKEN
PIZZA HE
Reel llolion Style
Orders to Go, Too
LUCCA CAFE
PHONE TU 4-3276
23S4 S. 6th
Why Pay More ... And Get Less?
The best all-around Compact anybody has
come up with yet!
-
See It! Drive It!
Compare!
Come in Enter Our
S or SO Sweepstokci
5 GRAND PRIZE
WINNERS
Plus 15,000 Other priics!
NO OBLIGATION
Drive this Voiiont 2-Door Sedan home for
only
$2 MP
Complete and rtody to f wttti standard Iranimtiiien,
httr nd 4frotrtrt, turn lignali, dual viton, varioblt
tptd Itctric wipr, antMrtti, ronton bar iui pant ton,
Itarnator, ond all th other 33 raatoni thot mako Val
iant the Kinf of the compacts . . . plus the 5 year
50,000 mile warranty!
JIM OLSON MOTORS
S22 So. 6th
Chrytlcr-lmperiol-Plymouth-GMC Trucki Ph. TU 4-5126
SAFFLOWER
CAPSULES
250 Count
98
100 Count
98c
Helena Curtis
EGG
SHAMPOO
Reg. 1.59
19
Now
1
Net Styli!
Rain and Wind
BONNETS
For Ladies
All Colors
69c
Butiprize Crcme Rinse
Hair Conditioner
ol!' olS"u
Tax
Money-Back Guarantee
Heavy 54x72 Flannel Backed Plastic
Table Cloths
Reg. 2.98
Large Variety
of Pattern, Colors
i39
g each
Black & White Film J- I
oo
Ideal Gift For Baby
Baby-Soft Pedi Bares v.i
The Shoe Thot Grows With Baby's Foot
98'
REMEMBER ALL GROCERY
PRICES GOOD THROUGH WED.
While Stocks Last!
r
Use First National Bank Money Orders, Up to 300.00 20c
jm ..-T.iwr.,,, ii mil,. u. ..wiumii.-h tmm - ""ii
r rr -w - -!- m w i mi m '
Right Reserved To Limit Closed Sundays
4710 So. 6th