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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1963)
PAGE t A HERALD AND Employes Win Honors For Service LAKEVIEW Present and pre vious Fremont National Forest employes were recently present ed cash awards in recognition of outstanding service. Mrs. Merle S. Hampton, cook at the Doe Lake Work Center, Drew's Valley District, has main tained an exceptionally high stan dard of performance, resulting in significant savings in the cost of mess operations. Charles W. Maxwell, fire eon Irol aid on the Bly District, work ing on his own time and furnish ina his own transportation, has killed over 1,800 porcupines dor ine the past six years. Jack D. Sauhert, now stationed in the regional office in Ogden, Utah, was instrumental in materi ally reducing timber stand im provement costs. Through Sail bert's efforts, thinning of stag nated 6tands of pondcrosa pine reproduction was cut in half, thereby doubling acreage thinned. The remaining trees can then make maximum growth each year and become a merchantable prod uct much sooner than they would have otherwise. J. Clifton Windle. now sta tioned in the regional office In Albuquerque, N.M., was instru mental in securing better ramjc management. This was accom plished through the division of large allotments, securing cooper ation from the permitccs in build ing needed management fences, and establishing deferred-rotation grazing on one-half of the range allotments. The awards were made in line with the Government Employes' Incentive Award Act for grant ing cash awards for special acts or services in the public inter est. Library Board Chief Named LAKEVIEW-Charlotte Pendle ton was elected president of the Lake County Library Board at a meeting held In the library Mon day, Feb. 11. She succeeds Rev. Hal Hargreaves, who tendered his . resignation from the board be i cause oi o Dcely was I Mrs. 11a Rjnan was i cause of other commitments. Jo sas named secretary. Harold tDnrothyi Baugh- Hjnan was namec, as a new mem Tier of the board, and Rev. Lester Boulden was named for the un expired term of Hargreaves. Tentative plans for Libary Week activities In April were made. It was also decided to set the regular meeting dates for the board on the first Monday of each month at 1:30 p.m. Board Meets BONANZA The Bonanza Park Board met at the library at 8 p.m. on Feb. It), with Lois VanSipe in charge. It was reported that rest rooms for the park have been started. Mrs. John Brown is In charge of the project. The $2M cleared hy the play "Jeepers Creepers," giv en Feb. 15-16, will be used for tlie rest rooms, but another $200 will have to be raised to finish them. The fence at the tennis court and basketball goals will be ready within a few weeks, and It was announced that a fountain will be built beside the tennis court in memory of Lois Hunt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bechdoldt. ftAIAM AWNV-iOt " " -v. J im wuvf KMiOnw rums nii'tuVUS f: 13 BIGGEST, BROADEST, FUNNIEST EVER! SffTf-ii HELEN TRAUBEL mom H(xior.irif ws$PAT STANLEY uonctMM M HtfttY lM(S md I aaatf riii mi few m HltT IfWll . Wrmm m tarn imm NEWS, Klamalh Falls. Ore 2-21 . 1HI tr WtA. Im. TM ttf Vi Off. 1 "This is Moskin, the new man. Show him what you do In your department when you think I'm 1 . watching you!" Long Elected Scale Chief FORT ROCK - R. A. Rube Long was renamed president of the North Lake County Scales Association, Inc., at the annual meeting held here Feb. 18. Mrs. Maurice Ward continues as secretary-treasurer. Indebtedness of the organiza tion was further reduced by a payment ordered by the conven ing members. Plans were also made for increasing corral space, with a work day to be announced. Mrs. Glenn Irwin has been named welghmaster. She may be called at 576-2214. Jess Cochell was named substitute in case of her absence and may be reached at the same number. Directors of the community as sociation, to provide local weights for delivery of cattle and hay, are Robert Morehouse, F. A. Fra zee, Maurice Ward, and Harold Miles. Talent Show Slated Here A talent show for yoiuigsters in the elementary grades through high school in some 40 schools throughout Klamath County and Northern California is to be held under the sponsorship of the lo cal order of Eagles Friday eve ning, March 2!), at Mills School, according to Lawrence Bullard, director of tlie contest. Prizes will be awarded to the winners of three categories, In cluding Class C, youngsters in ele mentary classes up to and in cluding the fourth grade; Class B, grades five through seven: Class A, grades eight through high school. rart of the money collected from arimiwons to the March 29 show will be used to defray ex penses while the remainder is to be set aside to benefit children, such as tlie issuing of scholar ships to tliose yoiuigsters v. ho have shown an interest in the talent tJiow. Children desiring to participate in the contest should contact B il lard, TU 2-1246 Starts Tonite! Own Tout :4J VP Tbchnteolor 4 fciiiiii-QJV I Thursday, February 21, 1963 'Instant' Missile Shot Okay CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - The Air Force seemed a bit un certain about what kind of missile It had fired Into space. But it was sure the shot was a success just the same. That was Wednesday night at Cape Canaveral, where a week ago scientists managed to lose a satellite after putting it into or bit. The missile in question this time was a Minuteman "instant ICBM." The Air Force fired it from the bottom of a concrete- lined "silo," and sent it more than 3.000 miles across the At lantic Ocean. But Minuteman missiles now adays are like brothers they can he members of the same family but entirely different from one an other. At this point Wednesday night, the official stares became blank: Was this Minuteman one of the earlier "Wing-1" models, like the two dozen or so now on station with nuclear warheads at Malm- strnm Air Force base near Great Falls, Mont.: Or was it one of the more ad vanced "Wing-2" rockets, a fairly different version using Improved first and second stages and still to become operational? Two Air Force spokesmen said they "didn't know." No one else seemed to either, but everyone was unanimous on one point it was a good shot. Shasta Comedy Needs Players MOUNT SILVSTA - Slarmaker Rilla Peterson has announced that she Is a director In search of eight characters for the upcoming production of "The Tender Trap." This rolicking modern comedy, authored by Max Shulman and Robert Paul Smith, will he cast by the tryout system with a ma jority vote of live casting com mittee members deciding. Tryouls have been scheduled for Sunday, March 3. at 2 p m. and Monday. March 4. at 8 p m. and will he held in the new Star makers Playhouse in Mount Shas ta City Park. All Siskiyou County residents are Invited to Irv their talents in this production, wheth er front or back stage. Previous memlierslup in Starmakers or ex perience in amateur theater is not a requirement. Ht WAS Hilf OHtMTH pur trf. i SiO i r.r'.'-vr1- WITHOUT SHAME Off GUILT! ' 5 ! MMM ' - mB Wiii.JIl'piil il Hay BSE x r i 1 r i r .- I . V I-- - IM .,',.- CAItY MICHVr.l.MIVIISIU M;HHIIUVIM)IN(;1IM1!KI:oh,stur;- TDV.ARO ANHALT S "T J I w II;1!!;!1" Scientists Make Virus From Sound HOUSTON LTI Cancer re searchers from three continents learned today how a team of Utah State University botanists used sound waves to create living vi ruses from cll-free plant and an imal substances. Dr. George W. Cochran ex plained how he and his associates developed the process, which was described as a major break through in cancer research. Cochran said his team also found the source of a suspected cancer link in intected cells to find where the suspected sub stance, nucleic acid, was formed. They found it in tiny green bodies containing chlorophyll, and in the nucleus, the "center" of the cell. Cochran said the researchers purified the green particles, put them in test tubes and broke them open with ultrasonic (high sound range) energy. They added a small amount of viral nucleic acid which served as a pattern to cre ate the new living organisms. Cochran made his report at the 17th annual symposium on funda mental cancer research at the University of Texas M. D. Ander son Hospital and Tumor Institute He said he discovered early last year that ribonucleic acid, usually produced by living cells or viruses, could be formed by cell-free extracts from infected plants. He duplicated in tlie test tube a type of ribonucleic acid formed by tobacco virus. Cochran said he hopes his ex periments will lead to new meth ods of chemical control of virus diseases including, possibly, can cer. Mine Claim Note Given LAKEVIEW - The Bureau of Land Management has informed Carl W. Simpson. Fremont Na tional Forest supervisor, that Feb. 1.1 was the date of first publication of notice on the Klam alli Area, county of K I a m a t h, .tatc of Oregon, regarding sur- face resource rights on unpatent ed mining claims pursuant to Sec tion 5 of tlie Act of July 2,1, 1935 'Public Law 107. fHth Congress) This notice will be published for nine consecutive weeks under tlie heading "Notice to Mining Claim ants, Oregon, oinnai." Maiw of the Klamath Area now being published and copies of Die Multiple Use Mining Law of July 2.1, 1955, and of the proce dure for the determination of sur face rights set up by tlie law are available for inspection at the Forest Supervisor's Office, I.ake- view. A claimant has two options un- dor the law. He may ignore the I notices, thereby waiving rights to the surface until the claim goes to palenl, yet malntainmg his ori ginal mining rights. Tlie claimant may die a verified statement as serting his rights to the surface In that case his claim will be examined by mineral examiners. Claims of questionable validity will be considered before a hear ing officer of the Bureau of ljuid Management. Department of the Interior, who will make the final decision. Both the claimant and lite Forest Service will present their testimony at tlie hearing. Whatever the decision, tlie claim ant will retain his mineral rights. II the decision is m the claim ant's favor, he also ret.uns all surface rights. GIRL rJiiMrn TECHNICOLOR Opent nit 4$ I I 1 Us I A A a -' 'J ' : KYLE ACCEPTS CHARTER Klamath Falls City Man ager Bob Kyle, right, president of the newly formed South Central Chapter of the Professional Engineers of Oregon accepts the chapter's charter at the state con vention in Portland Nov. 17 With Kyle is Allen E. Jans sen, dean of the engineering school at the University of Idaho and vice president of the Western Region of the National Society of Professional Engineers. Driver Bludgeons Girls For Refusal DELLE, Utah (UPI) The two 18-ycar-old girls, who were room mates, met the two youths in Salt Lake City Tuesday night. The four went to a movie, then em barked on an all-night drive. They drove into the mountains cast of Salt Lake City, then across to Wendovcr, Nev., on the Utah border, then to Dclle, then toward a sheepherder's cabin in the deso late hills near Great Salt Lake. It was midmorning by now. Sud denly the car settled into deep mud on the primitive road and stuck. liex Hintze, 17, the driver, asked the girls, Carol Clayton and Drinda Atnes, to help push it out. As Sheriff Fay Gillette of Tooele County tells it, tlie girls refused, got out, and said they were going to hitchhike a ride back to Dclle. Hintze, according to Gillette, had been drinking heavily and be came euraged. He grabbed a ham mer and chased tlie two girls down the side of a slope. Tony Uobcrtsnn, 19, watched in horror. "Afler elwut 10 minutes." Hob- and told me he 'killed the girls. He asked me to help hide the bodies. Tonv bolted. Scared and fearinc for his own life, he alternately ran and walked 14 miles to ueiie. It took more than three hours. There he burst into a cafe and asiied, "There are two dead girls out there." Heads Named By Theatre The second monthly meeting of the Klamath Civic Theatre was held on Feb. 18 and the following new officers were circled: Tom Mann, president; Mrs Pat Bradshaw, vice president; Mrs. Paulann Lungreen, secre tary, and Hob Srhnll, general manager. Among the new members wel comed at the meeting were Mrs. (trace Whitman. M r s. Nanette Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fields. Mrs. Sylvia Smith and Mrs. Betty Tnimpowrr. Other persons interested in pa tronizing the Klamath Civic The atre are invited to attend tlie meetings on the fust and third Monday of each monlli at R p.m. in the dining room of the Klam ath Auditorium. Woman Guilty Of Kidnaping Kir.KNE a IM' - Shn Icy M.ie Huckiivs. 22. Kucene. was fmuid guilty of kidnaping hy a Circuit Court jiuy here Wednesday. She was accusal in the abduc tion of Cottage Grove policeman James Cornell, his wife. Cather ine, and Raymond Harris, a neu!hhr. last lVc. C'l Edward Iean liiley. 22. Cottage Grove, earlier pleaded guilty to 111 .same charge. ((math Ptrri, Orfft Pu(iKxl daily ittctpi Sat t at Iuft4a? Sarvlftf 4thtrn OrtM( 1 n4 harthfn Cahfrna j Kiamir (Miihlt twM"Y Mam at ftpianatft I Pft TUtMt i nil ! W. . lwttHan, Pukitr ntrM a ixx-cia mantr at , pf fftc at Kama" Pant. O'tf. , Awfutt 71. It vmfar act C i frtt. March J. ' lK"d clatt ttt a at Klamath orttsn. and at aMitHvial malK Cernar 1 Maf I Manihf, 1 Vaar Matt m Atfvtnct t Mah i Mtxttha , Vaar ! Ct"iar n4 Daar I t M V I 1 tl I'l M ll N wktfar ft ivxav. tapv itc 1 UNITIO ((TITlC4L 4UOIT tUftlAU O CIRCULATION lvktcflart ! rc'vmf (alivrv tr Ha'a M Htm 'aM hM III ";. r (IB r i rim To Push Police drove him back to the stalled car on the lonely hillside. Moans led them to Carol and Drinda, lying partially buried un der rocks, tumbleweed and pieces of tin. "At first we thought it was 6heep we heard," Gillette said. Officers said the girls had been severely bludgeoned about the head. Hintze had fled into the foot hills on foot. Carol and Drinda were rushed to a Tooele hospital in critical condition. Drinda later was trans ferred to a Salt Lake City hos pital, where she underwent emer gency surgery early today. Both gills were fighting for their lives. Hintze was easily captured in the brushland by sheriff's depu ties who fanned out in Jeeps. The boys were held overnight in Tooele, The sheriff said charges would lie iiled against Hintze. Robertson was held for question ing. All four were Salt Lake City residents. I CJM IJfCCk JCII. lTIUIjC Raps Insult WASHINGTON' (UPI - Sen. Wayne Mor.so, D-Oriv, declared Wednesday Sen. Frank .1. Lausch D-Ohio, had marie an "insulting speech' about his mediation role in the recent dock strike settle ment. Morse took the Senate floor on a point of personal privilege tn cleanse what he called "this slur in tlie record" on the work of the special three-member presidential mediation board. Morse was named chairman of the board by President Kennedy. The Oregon Democrat charged that Iuicbe had "shown a gross ignorance of the whole dispute." The verbal exchance started Tuesday when Uiusche said that because of Morse's "predispoM tions and idealogies" it was "im possible for him to he what you might call an impartial arbitra tor." Moie fired haek: "Obviously, the senator from Ohio doesn't know the difference between arbitration and media tion." Morse jstid i f compulsory arbitration had been used, it would have cost tlie ship lines twice as much a. the settlement worked out by his more informal mediation board. Keep The Ponderosa Room Green Bring Money! nfard Ponderosa HffH Room Dinner fWi i.oo 3 f f'' 1 wntn ou uy anothfr & jJ I tqual dinner at rtgular T", 1 -J prtet. Cemt In thti frt- jHa day, bnnfl pictures at ly&jjm Georq Wathmgtan (an del- Sj'jf JH? tar bill m and join in tht I . VrrN un -f fnt pondari Room. m V . Besides the wonderful dinner value mentioned above, you can dance from 9 till 2 to Art Kaye ond the Comcdaircs, see their rpecial show and enjoy all the fun of the evening. Dining from 6 P.M. - Moke reservations now! It's this Thursday and Friday of . , . The Wiliard Hotel's Ponderosa Room 205 Main ffiff?? Charter During State Convention The South Central Chapter of the Professional Engineers of Ore gon, to include Klamath, Lake Deschutes, Harney, Crook, Jeffer son and Malheur, was formed in July, 1962, and Klamath Falls City Manager Bob Kyle was selected as the chapter's presi dent. The local chapter was present ed its charter at the state con vention in Portland Nov. 17. The 16 professional engineers comprising the chapter elected William L. Wales Jr., Klamath Falls civil engineer, as vice pres ident and Charles F. Shotts, Gil christ Lumber Company, secre tary. Board members are Robert E. Baird, OTI instructor; Eugene G. Gjertsen, Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, and Marion E. Unruh, U.S. Forest Service, Prineville. Other members are Richard G. Beane, Klamath Iron Works; Frank Kahl, Great Northern Rail way; Clifford Lawrence, Bureau of Reclamation; John Merryman, Kingsley Field; Lyle Smith, Klam ath County surveyor; Robert F. Starbuck, Morrison, Howard and Starbuck; Robert K. Thompson, Midland logging engineer; John Creed, Klamath County engineer, Gaylor Upington, Weyerhaeuser, retired, and Winston Kurth, as sistant Klamath County engineer. Activities planned by the chap ter for 1963 include participation in two 30-minute local TV pro grams to acquaint area residents with the association s activities, There will also be radio spot announcements calling the group's work to the attention of the public, and a service club program with a film entitled "The American hn Eineer." One of the main objectives of the national society is to make sure the public is protected from unlicensed persons practicing en "ineerinc. Each local chapter is authorized to report any persons practicing without a state license. The society also administers scholarships for some corpora tions and guides qualified students who desire to pursue courses in encineerinc. Society members make themselves available in lo cal high schools for counselling purposes also. The national society is organ ized on a three-level basis ... lo cal community, state, and nation al, and at each level the ni ganiza Public InVited I To KU Recital The Klamath Falls schools' mu sic department will present a re cital of instrumental and vocal soloists and ensembles at 7 p.m. Fridav. Feh. 22. at the Mills School Auditorium. LaMar K. Jen sen, director of instrumental mu sic, announced. The program will probably be about three hours long and the public is invilcd. Jensen said. These same soloists and ensem bles will represent Klamath Falls in the Oislrict Solo and Ensem ble Contest which will be held in Roseburg in the near future. DO IT YOURSELF OR WE'LL DO IT FOR YOU it'H' Green Stomps BOB'S Self-Service Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1711 Main TU 4-9214 Thursday and Friday i c lion functions as an autonomous unit in respect to problems af fecting engineering practice and the public welfare in its area. The society is dcomocratic in structure, with all officers at all levels elected annually by direct membership vote. More than 56.000 protessional engineers in all technical branch es comprise the national organi zation. They are all registered to practice engineering in accord ance with the laws of t h e.i r states. In general, these professional men jive consulting engineers in private practice, and engineers in NOW DIRECT FROM ALLSTAfET i AUTO AT ROCK W y I i RATES- a- CJ -r - y-j g You may save S1Q0-S200 by financing your next car -new or useddirectly through Allstate. ..It's like getting an extra paycheck! When you buy s oar, you are not oHif;ed to 6nance through the dealer. You have the right to aave money, and the way to save is through Allstate Econo-Rate Finance. Econo-Rate does business the big-volume, low overhead, more for your money Allstate way. And you'd be amazed at the big difference in the cost of your loan. 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