THE DOCTOR'S MAILBAQ Near Normal Life ydwaffs Epileptics . By W. G. BR.VVDSTADT, IM.D. ; WrittcD tor ' Newspaper Enterprise Assn. 0 Our family doctor toys that ' our son has epilepsy. What can we t ;'6o to help him if he start to ', have a seizure? How will this J disease affect his education, oc ; cupation, and marriage? : ' A If those around your son . can tell by his crying out or roll ing his eyes that an attack is starting they can, if they are close enough, prevent him from fall ing. A cork, wadded handkerchief or wooden pencil should be forced as far back between his teeth as possible taking care not to get your own fingers billon. J his will . prevent him from biting his -. tongue. Every effort must be made to bring his attacks under control before trying to plan his future. Zi If modern treatment succeeds In :,; controlling his attacks he should ':- be able to lead a normal life as - regards his schooling, his work, ana marriage. ; y our 7-year-om oaugnier nas passed out completely for a few - seconds on two occasions. The doctor says she has petit mal epilepsy. He says it is not a bad case but I feel like someone had hit me with a club. Please tell : me all you can about this disease : A There Is an excellent chance that your daughter's epilepsy can be completely controlled because the petit mal (mild) attacks are ' much easier to treat successfully r.; than are the grand mal or severe ; attacks. If her attacks are prop, r'erly controlled and she carries out your doctor's instructions, she should function as any normal child. Q Is It dangerous to stop a grand ma epileptic seizure with massage before it runs its full course? I have a friend who has these spells and if I massage him before they get going strong he comes out of it more alert than If it goes on its full course which leaves him stiff and blue and exhausted. A I nave never neara ot mas sage for grand mal attacks and - non i see now you can manage 10 be nresent when his attacks are starting. The difficulty here is that many an epileptic has a mixture of mild attacks ani severe at tacks. If you massage him during a mild attack he would not be ex hausted on awakening. Why not get him to a specialist and see if the attacks cannot be prevented? Q I am 22 years old and un til two years ago I had fainting spells. The doctor now gives me anticonvulsant drugs which keep me from having these spells. Since I have lost out on my schooling I would like to know of a place where I could go to complete my education. A Many cities now have adult education groups for all levels of instruction (primary school, high school and college). These are almost always held at night and are sponsored by universi ties, public school system, or the YMCA. Your state's department of education can guide you along this line and if you do not want to live in the city they can direct you to correspondence courses, Please send your questions and comments to Dr. Wayne G. Brand- stadt, M.D., in care of this pa per. While Dr. Brandstadt can- not answer individual letters, he will answer letters of general in terest in future columns. Continuous Todoy From 10:45 OTSiBRSIfflR - - wir NOW ...1DD A MOTION P b UK1 ' Tft TUI UIAMMDI ni THE WORLD MhAKUlUhtUHIi IMS BUIBA USTWtCOlOK .f-. Saving Plan Inaugurated SALEM (UPD A method of saving more than $4,000 a session in the cost of assembling printed legislative bills will be inaugu rated Monday. Assembling of the bills by hand has been done by the state print ing office. The work is being shifted to the bill mailing room where workers are paid a lower wage. The idea was suggested by House Speaker Clarence Barton, D-Coquille, as one of a series ol legislative economy measures. The plan won approval of Sen ate President Ben Musa, D-Tho Dalles. Still under study by Barton Bnd Musa was the advisability ol printing bills on newsprint. This would save about $11,000 a scs- slon.The plan has not been adopt ed because It has not been deter mined if newsprint will stand up under heavy usage, and the stale printer fears use of the cheaper paper might require running presses at a slower speed. The paper now being used is of cheaper grade than was used during tile lOfil session. Barton said, and a savings of about $5,000 will result even if the switch to newsprint is not made. Requests for sets of bills are being screened closely in an ct lort to cut down on the volume being mailed and thus reduce oslage costs. It is not yet known how much of a saving will result from this move. Polio Shot Campaigns Supported Communities planning immuni zation campaigns against poliomy elitis are urged to move ahead, using all three types of Sabin oral vaccine with particular em phasis on children and young adults, Surgeon General Luther L. Terry of the Public Health Service announced recently. Dr. Terry said that this is the recommendation of the Surgeon General's Special Advisory Com mittee on Oral Poliomyelitis Vac cine which concluded its fifth meeting this year on Dec. 18, and that he has accepted the com mittee's recommendations. The committee stressed that special attention be given to chil dren because they comprise the population group "in whom the danger of naturally occurring po liomyelitis is greatest and who serve as the natural source of po liomyelitis infection in the com munity." "The committee feels and 1 wholeheartedly agree that of greatest importance is planning lor the continuing vaccination ol oncoming generations," the s u r geon general said. "This Is the only way we will succeed in erad icating polio permanently." "Because the need for immu nization diminishes with advanc ing age and because potential risks of vaccine are believed by some to exist in adults, especial ly above the age of 30, vaccina tion should be used for adults only with the full recognition of its very small risk. Vaccination is especially recommended for those adults who are at higher risk of naturally occurring dis ease: ; for example, parents of. young children, pregnant women, persons in epidemic situations and those planning foreign travel. With this clearance of all but an infinitesimal risk for Type III Sabin Oral Vaccine in adults, all Northern California counties are proceeding with the administration of the third dose of the vaccine to establish complete immunity against poliomyelitis. Siskiyou County will hold its clinics, for Type III during the week of March 25-29. 1063. Make-up clinics for all three1 types of the Sabin Oral Vaccine will then be held during the week of April 22, MM. Notice ol the clinic schedule and sites will be published In all lo cal papers. PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, January 20. 19A3 mm Vet ' i t 4 1 : 1 CAMPFIRE HEADS Highlighting the recent' annua! meeting of the Klamath Council Campfiro Girls was the election of new council officers. Pictured from left are Mrs. Ron Phair, secretary; Harvey Denham, first vice president; Mrs. Guy Barker, president and Robert Kennedy, second vice president. Mtotder, Assault Trials Set In Judge Vqndenberg's Court Family Flees Burning Home PORTLAND (L'PD- A mother and her five children escaped Thursday night from their blazing two-story frame home in south east Tortland. A neighbor. Mrs. Gloria Sic- miencHik, helped 'Mrs. Janet L. Ferguson, and the children, rang ing in age from 3 to 12, to safely. Ahout 10 per cent of the world's ollee crop is produced in Cen tral America. Power Tie Protested By Morgan WASHINGTON (UPD - Fed cral Power Commissioner Howard Morgan charged Friday that pri vate power interests would use interstate high - voltage transmis sion lines to "strangle" publicly owned utilities. Morgan made the charge in a dissent to an FPC report recom mending against enactment of leg islation to extend the commis sion's jurisdiction to the construc tion of interstate power lines. The report was submitted to Rep. Oren Harris, D-Ark., chair man ot the House Commerce, Committee, by FPC Chairman Joseph C. Swidler. Swidlcr urged that action on the legislation be held up pending completion of a national power survey now being made by the FPC. Morgan, the lone dissenter on the commission, termed the report naive in the extreme" and said the suggestion that action be de layed was "incredible." The former Oregon Public Util ity Commissioner said some seg ments of Ihe private power indus try would use cxtra-high-voltagc transmission lines "to protect and maintain monopoly positions while isolating, restricting or strangling municipal or rural electric sys tems and publicly owned trans mission lines. Indeed, he added, the very first proposals for a privately owned 500.000 - volt line in the United States, between the Pa cific Northwest and California carried with it such serious threats to the public interest that it led directly to the introduction of the bill on which we here re port." Sw idler s majority report said that if the proposed legislation were passed it should apply to high voltage transmission lines built by public agencies as well as private lines. New Officers Selected At Camp Fire Banquet The annual dinner and meeting of the Klamath Council Camp Fire Girls, held Jan. 15 in the Wi nema Hotel, was attended by 60 persons. At the business session, con ducted by the retiring president Mrs. George Nelson, new board members and council officers for 1963 were elected. Board members, who will serve a three-year term, are Mrs. Guy Barker, Miss Carol Foster, Judge Donald Piper, Frenchie Richard, TOWER THEATRE . . . Progress Report No. 1 Ochiho Jury Hears Rifle Testimony The .308 caliber rifle used in the slaying of Bruce Miller, 38, was the subject of most of the testimony during the first degre murder trial of Mrs. Zelma Joan Ochiho in circuit court Fridav. Mrs. Ochiho is on trial for the gun slaying of Miller in her home, 624 Mt. Whitney Street. Nov. 14 Three law enforcement officers were summoned as witnesses to establish that the rifle was the alleged murrterw.ipon. Klamath County slierllf deputies Lou Bo Bart and Del Summers testified that they discovered the rifle ly ing near the body, and later found the slug which killed Miller in a nearby door casing. Lt. Clark Johnson of the State Bureau of Identification testified later that he received a rifle from Deputy Bogart on Dec. ; and examined it for latent finger prints. He found none, explaining that latent prints are formed by moisture on an individual's fingers and often evaporate. In a surprise move made by the defense, the attorney repre senting Mrs. Ochiho requested that the jurv leave the court room, and, after the jurors had done so, he called the defendant to the witness stand. Mrs. Ochiho emotionally relat ed to the court that before the trial Sheriff Murray "Red" Brit ton informed her sne would be charged with murder in the sec ond degree providing she entered a plea o( guilty to the crime. Im mediately following her state ment Judge Vandenberg recessed Ihe trial until Mondav. Liter in his office. Sheriff Brit- ton slated that he had made no such promises to Mrs. Ochiho. The henff said the defendant had come to him and inquired about the possible consequences of the murder trial. Sheriff Britlon said he expressed an opinion but made no promises. Mrs. Herbert Waits, Max Ruge, Mrs. Richard Francis, and Ron Wilkerson. Mrs. Arthur Farr was elected to a two-year term, and Mrs. Lawrence Slater and Mrs. Henry Kerr, a one-year term The council officers are Mrs. Guy Barker, president; Harvey Denham, first vice president; Rob ert Kennedy, second vice presi dent; Mrs. Ron Phair, secretary; and Robert Davies, treasurer. Judge Donald Piper, past presi dent of the council, conducted the installation ceremony. The featured speaker for the evening was Phil Parsons, execu tive secretary of the United Fund. His topic was "You and Your Community." Entertainment was provided by the Sweet Adelines, under the direction of Mrs. James Perkins. Arrangements for the meeting were made by Mrs. Louis Holz- gang, Mrs. Vade Kirby, and Mrs R. L. Madsen. Jerry Richard Haines. 24. en tcred a plea of not guilty to the Inst degree murder of his wife, Christine, in circuit court Friday, in one of 10 criminal matters brought before Judge David R Vandenberg. The jurist set 10 a.m. Monday, Feb. 18, as the time for the trial of Haines, who shot his expectant wife of twins with a bullet fired from a .22 caliber pistol during an incident at Mrs. Haines' home, 3863 Clinton Street, last Dec. 17. After Mrs. Haines was struck by the bullet, she called an am bulance and was taken to the Klamath Valley Hospital where she died four hours later. Haines fled from the scene of the shoot ing but surrendered to stale po lice at a Poe Valley tavern later Ihe same day. Judge Vandenberg also set the dales for the trials of two men who are in custody on charges of assault with a dangerous weap on as the result ol two other shootings. One of the two is Royal Jones. 37. accused of wounding his wife three times with bullets d i s- charged from a .22 caliber pistol Dec. 18, and the other is Melvin Leon Barkley, 42. who shot his nephew James Thomas once in the stomach and again in the hip with bullets fired from a .25 call ber automatic, Nov. 13. Jones' trial is slated for Feb 11 while Barkley's trial date is March 6. Judge Va'lenberg also desig- Plane Crash Bodies Found SALT LAKE CITY-(UPll The bodies of three men killed in the crash of a West Coast1 Airlines plane were recovered Saturday from the icy water of Great Salt Lake. The Salt Lake County sheriff's office said two of the bodies wo recovered by "Weasel." The third was plucked from the shallow water by helicopter. Saturday's successful recovery efforts ended two days of intensive searching for the plane, a F-27 propjet. and its three occupants which plunged into the lake Thurs day afternoon while on a training mission. The bodies were first sighted from the air Friday, but high winds and clouds thwarted search ers in their efforts to recover them. However, the weather improved considerably Saturday and light planes, helicopters, boats and rub ber rafts were pressed into the search at dawn. They were identified as Capt. Bill Lockwood, Yakima. Wash., a West Coast pilot acting as an instructor; Capt. Elmer Cook. Boise, Idaho, a veteran pilot be- in? trained In fv the nton.lel- and R V Davis Kealllo a f ed. I eral Aviatien Agency inspector. The plane left Salt Lake Air port Thursday afternoon with plans to return in an hour and half. A search was started when it had not returned several hours later. Hills Combed For Gunman BLOWING ROCK. N.C. (UPD Stale troopers fanned out over rugged terrain in the Blue Ridge Mountains today in a search for the slayer of the police chief of this resort town. The suspect, described as arm ed, wounded, dangerous and "ready to do anything," was re ported holed up on a mountain top near here. Fog, rain and mud halted the search for Millard Greer, 45, late Friday. Authorities recovered a car believed to be the one In which he escaped alter a gun and knife battle which resulted in the death of Police Chief William D. Greene. 28. father of two. Greer, an uncle ol one of the three persons under arrest in the killing, was tracked up a muddy mountain road by bloodhounds Friday night until rain and fog moved in. obliterating the scent and limiting visibility to 12 feet. His car, smeared with blood stains, was found abandoned on U.S. 221 late Friday. Greene, who had been chief of police in this mountain resort for seven years, was mortally wound ed when he caught a carload of burglars leaving a wealthy man's mountain retreat early Friday. He was shot twice with a shotgun and stabbed twice. Greer was identified by Greene shortly before the chief died in hospital as the one who shot him. R. R. Parsons. 22. Greer's nephew, was arrested in the farm home of his brother-in-law about 12 hours after the shooting. He was charged with murder in the case. Murder warrants were also sworn out against Greer. nated March 4 as the time (or the trial of Alvin Lee Jackson, who entered a plea of not guilty to taking and using a Hurry Cab Co. taxi without the consent of the owners during the pre dawn hours of Dec. 10. Two others charged with burgla ry requested additional time to enter pleas. Robert Leon Chock- toot. 19. accused of the burglary of Ralph's Curio Shop and the Unique Market on Jan, 3 was or dered to enter a plea, Jan. 28, while Leon Pearson, charged with the burglary of the residence of Rape Suspect Surrenders OREGON CITY (UPD Robert George Dixon. 3.1, wanted on a charge of raping an 8-year-old girl near Clackamas Jan. 6. sur rendered himself Friday to Clack amas County police. Dixon, wanted also for question ing in the rape-slaying of Mona Rae Minyard. 6, Portland, told deputies he was "tired of run ning." Dixn maintained he was inno cent of the charge of raping the 8-year-old girl in a trailer park. Bail was continued at $7,500, the amount set in the warrant for his arrest. Dixon resuscd to discuss the case. He said he had "problems" and wanted to, talk with a psychia trist before making a statement. The Minyard girl was abducted from near her home Dec. 29. Her body was found in the Clackamas area a few days later. Clackamas County police said Dixon would be questioned about the Minyard case, but Portland police had struck him from the list of suspects. Clco Williams, 714 North Third Street, was ordered to do the same, Jan. 25. Judge Vandenberg also set the same day as the time he would pronounce sentence on two men who entered pleas of guilty to two unrelated charges of forgery. They are Owen McKinley Hodge, 59. charged with publishing a lorged check in the amount of $21 to the Payless Drug Store, Nov. 28, and Louis Trenton Utter, who admitted to issuing a forged check in the amount of $179 to Harry Hatter, Sept. 10. In two other matters, the judge deferred setting the dale for the hearing of a demurrer involving Aiiin Lee Rich, charged with the burglary of the Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Leach home, 4035 Bry ant Street, Jan. 1, and took un der advisement a request for the dismissal of an indictment charg ing Leonard Mackey with obtain ing money by false pretenses. The attorney representing Mackey ar gued (or the dismissal on the grounds that 60 days had passed before the defendant was indicted for the alleged crime. DENTAL PLATES Repaired etc. Our convtnitnt, handy, practical, and economical services NOW available. No appointment needed. Na drift? - nit waiting rrrdit Evenino by rtqu'it OPEN 9:00 - 5:00 1033 Main St. TU 4-3284 FINE-FURNITURE STYLING... FINE STEREO PERFORMANCE ri Yet priced like 7 13 ' One London broker exports sperm whale teeth in limited quantities to the Fiji Islands, where they are used as monev. INCOME TAXES Coma in and see ut CHAS. HATHAWAY Tl. TL 4-1111 N Hlh SI r Conlemporiirv tylmg. Model SKIOO: to Innh,o0 wide, derp. MOTOROLA Coffee Table Stereo Console Multi-Channel Amplifier with 3 Output Transformers 3 Separate Speaker Syatemi Super-Quiet Automatic Record Changer FINISHED ON ALL 4 SIDES FOR ISE ANYWHERE 12.95 DOWN - EASY, EASY MONTHLY TERMS I .-i ,rtlrt- I ilSllPI 13 I11RTH RATE DROTS VIENNA UTI'-A falling birth rate has forced Communist Czech o'loxakia to clamp down on legal abortions. aocoi-d:n; to experts in eastern Kurnpean affairs here. Tiie official Czech news agency Ceieka has repoiled that tlie coun try's h-.rth rate dropped to 15 8 per thousand inhabitants in l!l compared to 71 per thousand in !.4 It sa;d the povemment plans lo inrti;,ite abortion request moi e tiv rouc'iK Preview of coming attractions . . . M "BRAND NEW" THEATRE! Believe it or not 'he obovt picture was token in what used to be the lobby of the Tower Theotrt. Like most of tht Tower, if'$ o mess right now. Workmen by the doieni or itorting the big job of completely rejuvenating tht house. Coming will be a new mock bor ond equipment, o new entrance, new sound equipment, new tagc hangings, new corpet, new woll coverings, new rcstrooms ond a complete foee lifting throughout. Target date for the grand opening ii mid-February. Pic tured obove, left to right ore Terry Brown, Brown's Plumbing and Heating; Rich ord Teofer, projectionist, Mervin Worley, house manoger, ond i. E. "Bif" Gellotlv, district manager. They're discussing plumbing for the new snack sfond which will be locoted right in the center of the lobby. KHmafii pain, ortitn Pufehiritf) it iicii Sat i arte tuneay MrviM 1eulrft O'tf" ni NarlMrn Cl'trni kv KitaHi Puklitine CataNV mh at iitianaff trt TUlMO ni W . titiar. 9utftr ) r at tcntJ-cla mntf I Mic at k'amatx PHt. Ortf Aufutt H. var act f Caft- t'Mi. wart l. ir iii t tt M.d at Kiamtlft Fa". Ort n at a0'rai niirf "(. SUBSCRIPTION KATtS Carnar 1 ManfH ll'I 1 MMM . . I't I l aar Ml Wail m Mvanct 1 ManfM I'" Maathl 1 Ytar HIM Ctrrtar t4 Daatan war Swneev. UtHTID ittTI tltNL AUDIT tUKIAU OP CltCULATION i'Kri'( mi rfxiie t'tnr t tir Mara ! Natrt. TUiat A-llll hftr F M. M TL II! D JANUARY CLEARANCE STARTS NOW AT 3 una r yij a a TJ c 73 iHiiaHMiilMMlai MENSTORE 6th & Main Reductions On Famous Brand Clothing SAVINGS ON SUITS, SPORTCOATS. TOPCOATS, JACKETS, ETC. S&ri Green Stamps Given On All Regular Priced Merchandise