Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1963)
o Klamath . ' HOWARD R COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT PERRiN. ARCHITECT NEW HEALTH BUILDING This artist's sketch shows the plan for the new split-lcvol building for the Klamath County Health Department. Bids will be opened on July 24 for the building to be constructed adjacent to the Klamath County Juvenile Home, and completion is ex pected for sometime in 1 964. E PRODUCTS mid-year show signs o! continuing the uphill climb through 1963, re ports M. I). Thomas, Oregon State University extension agri cultural economist. Thomas makes his comments in the new From Johnson & Johnson, New;Oregon Farm and Market Out- Brunswick. X. J., comes a new look circular now available from Band-Aid Spray Antiseptic uhich.Jcounty extension otfices. jt is said, "retains a major germ- Consumer, business and govern- fighting activity in the presencejment spending are uniting to pro NEW YORK lUPH - Every thing's featuring "spray" these days from antiseptics and ban dages to calking compounds and wood stain. Economics Show Indicators Of Continued Uphiii Climb State and national economies at i increased only slightly in the past of blood, inhibiting the growth o( infection-spreading bacteria inside a wound as well as on the sur face." Said to be non-toxic, non staining and non - irritating. The cooling aerosol spray is said to help relieve pain quickly. Al though primarily designed for treatment of bleeding injuries it is said to be effective also for cuts, scrapes, burns and non-poisonous insect bites. . Alberto - Culver Co., Melrose Park, III., has introduced a new! medicated spray bandage. Safe guard, which forms a durable, flexible plastic coating that can not peel, cur or wrinkle and per mits aeration of the wound. The bandage, in an aerosol container, may be removed easily with warm water without pulling away the scab formation of a wound. Said to be stinglcss, and to providci medication up to 24 hours for cuts, scratches, burns and abra sions and to relieve itching and pain from insect bites. vide the power to sustain economy's climb, although the year. . Markets for United Slates prod ucts are now absorbing fully a fifth more factory output than live years ago at prices little changed from that time, he noted. Business spending for n e w plants and equipment has been rising. Corporate prolits before and after taxes have reached new highs. Earnings, dividends savings and confidence have lieen the'high enough to bid stock prices pace may slow some from the "P sharply, he pointed out. rapid rate of the past six months, Confidence has also been high he writes. 'enough to put more than a tril- Prospective increases in busi ness activity, along with further gains in population, employment and consumer incomes will lead to increased purchases of food and other farm products this year, Thomas believes. However, these circumstances do not promise high prices and! MALIN One of the old land- profits for abundant farm prod-i marks established by an early Vowells Bisy Early Ranch nets. Yet they undoubtedly yield larger farm incomes and more off-farm job and investment op portunities than would be the case if the economy were static or declining, he said. Latest surveys show consum ers are still in the mood to buy more new cars than in 1962 and expect to step up purchases of appliances and other household equipment later in the year. Spending (or food and accompany-i ing services continues to be high. Factory orders, especially for ! durable goods, have been coming A new spray-on wood stain has in faster than a year earlier with the backlog of unfilled or ders holding up despite increased output and unused capacity in some industries. Inventories have been introduced by Sears. Roe buck & Co., Chicago, which is said to be ideal (or ready - to- finish furniture, especially pieces such as louvcred shutters that have surfaces difficult to cover with a wiping stain. It is said even runs in the stain will disap pear after 10 to 15 minutes of diving time. Sold under the Mas ter-Mixed label, the stain is avail able in provincial, red maple cherry, fruilwood, driftwood and walnut finish. From S. C. Johnson & Son. Inc.. Racine, Wis., comes a new Spray Shine Carnu for auto cleaning and polishing. The product, sprayed on a car one section at a time, is spread by cloth with firm circu lar motions then wiped off with a clean cloth when dry. A car that is only dusty or moderately dirtv need not be washed first. The cleaner-polish also is suitable for Use on pleasure boats of alumi num, fiber glass or wood. A different kind of spray, hut one that will he welcomed bv travelers is General Electrics new portable, spray, steam and drv iron. Tiie new iron features a manual spray attachment for the water bulb and a regular bulb cap for steam ironing. Weigh ing only 2f ouiii.es. the iron has thermostatically controlled tem perature set;:,igs. a folding handle and a zipper storage bag. Malm settler, the 80-acre Jelinck ranch, was recently sold to the Vowcll brothers of Langell Valley The land was originally pur chased in 1909 from t h e Lake side Development Company. At that time it was under drainage and partially covered with Tule- lake waters. Vincent Jelinck Sr., with his family, moved to t h e ranch in 1910 from Cottonwood. Calif., and farmed with his son, Vincent Jr., until 1935 when he retired and moved into town. Another son. Rudolph, ind his wife. Irene, pur County Asks Split Level Building Bid Bids for a new spin level build ing to be the headquarters for the Klamath County Health i. partment arc being accepted ef fective today and will h? received by the county court ui.nl tlx. open ing of bids, 3 p.m., ttednivdav, July 24. according to the ar-lii-tect, Howard K. Pernn. The site (or the new buildinj will be adjacent to the tountv Juvenile Home on Vandenberg Road, near Alameda Aeime. When the structure is completed sometime next year, the Public Health Office will move into the new quarters from its present lo cation at VJyJ -Mam Mieot. The building now occupied by the department will then be olfered for sale by the county. The specifications call (or a split level structure consisting ot 7.150 square foot of !irw aiea The upper level will contain '. (ice space for the public health officer, nurses, clerical workers and sanitarians, in addition to treatment lutwi. .vrav room work and storage rooms, multi- use area, reception and waiting areas, toilet facilities and sUiff rooms. The lower level will provide of fice space for psychiatrists, psy chologists and psychiatric social workers. It will also provide lor a play room, reception and .secre tariat spaces, uuieis. and a me chanical room. A garage lor the staff will be located on the same level. The hid will also include exte rior site work consisting of gravel drives and parking areas, con crete walks, landscape work and fencing. Bid specifications mav be ob- Ml Business Review By Floyd L Wynne HKUAl.D AM) NKWS, Kiamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, July 7. 1963 TAGE 3 . -WHY . . 1 V S A s I 3 iv.' .; lion dollars worth of credit into use in this country. The ability and willingness to use credit and obligate future incomes has been one of the continuing contribii tors to economic growth in re cent years. Thomas observed. Employment has been setting new highs, but labor disputes, automation and a rapid increase in workers keeps unemployment up. The shift from farm to off-farm employment is continuing with 13 oll-tarm jobs tor every one on the!,ainoo; fnm nle Klamath Conn farm. Fifty years ago the ratio(v court, courthouse Klamath was about two to one. This adjust- falls mcnt seems likely to continue I as long as off-farm incomes are high in relation to farm incomes, Thomas said. YARD MANAGER James F. Smith is the new J. W. Copeland yard manager for the Chiloquin office, re placing Jim Rodgers who opened his own business. With his wife, Marchia, and children, Butch, 16, and Marchia, 18, Smith recent ly moved to Chiloquin from Klamath Falls Firm Finds Alder Use A use (or bark of once-spurned alder trees was reported recent ly by Weyerhaeuser Company The company has started pro duction at Longview of a maters al for making plywood glues go further. The extender, known as Silvabond. was developed from alder bark following intensive re search at Weyerhaeuser s Long view laboratories. Dr. Donald H. Clark ot Seat tle, secretary - manager of the Northwest Hardwood Association, said the development is the first commercial use of bark from al der, a Pacific Northwest hard wood once considered of little value. Wood of alder is used in production o( pulp, fiber, lumber and iplywood. W. H. Meadowcrott, manager oi W'eyerhacuser's New Troducts Division, said the extender passed standard Douglas Fir Plywood Association tests with "excellent results." Sears Plans Newspaper & 1 f V V Building Permifs Up Building permits increased In Klamath Falls in May. 1!X3. com pared to May, l'.HK, the Universi ty of Oregon Bureau of Busi ness Research has reported. In May. 19(53, the total was $440,800, compared to S151.133 m the same month last year. Building permits from 1411 identical reporting centers in Ore gon totaled $33,619,836 in M a y lflfi:i. This was 36 per cent higher than in May 1962. The state total in May. 19113 included $18,600,366 for 1.688 new dwelling units: $11,238,548 for non residential construction: and S3 I . r,ij """"" ""-yyjLfT nrrk ii n ft5' W, , ' iMl: V I JIM SPIKE Firestone Names Spike New manager at Firestone Store, Sixth and Pine, is Jim Spike, 29, who took over the operation on Monday, July 1 Born in Tacoma, Spike attended the Western Washington College at Bellingham, and was employed by the Bank of California and prior to going to work for the Firestone Company in October of 1961. He and his wife, Vilma, will lesidc at 145 Dahlia. Local Firm Given Bid PORTLAND (UPI) - Klamath Plumbing and Heating Co. of Klamath Falls was low bidder for CHICAGO Sears, Roebuck and Co. expects to spend more than 60 million dollars for newspaper advertising this year, the com pany has announced. George H. Struthcrs. vice presi dent in charge of merchandising. gave this estimate based on pre liminary reports and forecasts for the remainder of 1963 from more than 750 Sears retail stores across the nation. At the same time, he reported actual expenditures in 1962 es tablished a new record of 58 mil lion dollars for newspaper adver tising. This was five million dol lars more than the 1961 expendi ture, he said, and represented the fourth consecutive year that Sears newspaper advertising has topped 50 million dollars. Struthers noted that in 1962 the company's retail stores pur chased 286.5 million lines of white space in 921 daily and weekly newspapers located in every tate except Alaska, where Sears has no retail stores. Linage in creased 7.9 per cent over 1961, he said, while the cost of space In creased 9.4 per cent. The 58 million dollars repre sented 71.2 per cent of Sears to tal retail media expense of 81.4 million. Advertising through circulars, magazines, radio and television, and miscellaneous me dia accounted for the remainder. Sears continuing expansion pro gram has resulted in a steady increase in the use of newspaper advertising, Struthers pointed out. The number of Sears stores has increased from 625 in 1948 to a total of 748 at the end o 1962. In addition to this increased num ber of stores, nearly 200 new stores have been built to replace older, smaller stores. In the same 15 years, Sears stores have invested more than 600 million dollars in newspaper advertising. And the company's sales have doubled from 2.3 bil lion dollars in 1948 to 4.6 billiop dollars in 1962. This is tangible evidence of- our continuing faith in the po tency of newspaper advertising," Struthers said. 1 "From the day Sears opened improvements on a levee and its first retail store," he said, pumping station along the Colum-l"tlte company has made greater bia River in Columbia County, the and greater use of newspapers' Army engineers announcca wea-m is obvious that Scars store nesday. (managers continue, to regard the The Klamath Falls firm bidWcwspapcr as their major me-; $102,206.50, more than $5,000 un- dium tor more man Historical rca- chased the ranch and farmed iti780 922 for additions, alterations', until the sale to the Vowells. I anj renairs of existinc structures The Jelineks are building a new home on property located on Tur key Hill Road north of Malin. I m mm i w M C. I t.'ti .-V-'Arl non . LAWRENCE E. LEWIS Lewis Operates Service Center Larry's Service Center. 222 South Sixth Street, has been opened by Lawrence K. i Larry1 Ix!is, long time resident of this ai'ea. Lewis Inst 'came to Klamath Falls in 19-16 and was employed as mechanic and luncup special i't at a local garage for 10 years. He was with the California Ore gon Power Company lor more Questionnaires are being mailed, '"an mo yeais, ami lor me last this nb in nnnmvimailu 5 non P" moiitns nas operated ins own n-m mum.iirfMr. in nhi a in I business, the Main Street Gar a information for the 1963 Edition For the same month last year the $24,676,709 total of permits was composed of $11,550,806 for 1.012 new dwelling units; $9,599. 878 for non-residential construc tion; and $3,526,025 for additions alterations, and repairs to exist ing structures. Manufacturers Are Questioned I of the Directory of Oregon Manu facturers and Buyers Guide. The biennial survey by the Ore- igon Department of Planning and 'Development will ask manufac Iturers for information on location LOAN OFFICE PLANNED John Kalita recently an nounced plans o operate a small loan Compaq in con function with his insuranco office in downtown Chiloquin. The new business, called the Winema Exchange, will be opened in tho near future. New Loan Office Opens der the government estimate. The project is located in the Woodson Drainage District. suns, lncir evaluation is nasea, on the day-to-day results in their stores. marine, fire and automobile. John and F.lcanor Kalita and their four children, Johnny, 14. Larry, 13; Billy, 12; and Brad, 10, are former residents of South ern California. They plan to make thceir pcrmant home here. Firm Given at 25 Mam. A Marine veteran of World War II, Lewis served in combat acliv ity in the Pacific area. Ho was one of two men credited with de velopment of the snorkel kits for jeeps and trucks that enabled J -i 1, I i I i-f t I I The Massachusetts Bay Colony. in 1962. granted a patent to John WIN SPECIAL AWARD The Northside Garden Club of Klamath Falls was winner of the Richfield Civic Beau tification Award for this district. Mrs. Bernard Vallc is shown accepting the award for Mrs. Edna Bowman, presi- dent of the club, from G. J. Dunne, Northwest manager ., ... - i- i . s 1 1 m I a. u e. 'Ui i' of plants, products produced and""" ' w'ucr remaining gap in America's number of employes. r " , " , , scenic West Coast Highway is As in the mi edition, the di-i' as " f with a bridge now rectory will contain an alphabeti-iS?" '" le M""nc Di-!1 ' thc mou,hh0 the tablishmcnts in the state, a lisl-l reside at 2141 ing by tyies of products using ,'hite. I hey have two daughters. Standard Industrial Code classifi- '! a phomore next cations, and a geographical Ij-lyear at M.II.S..an(l lercsa is 4. ing by cities and counties. j " e .' s lor The directory, which rates as a '" the Pelican Mol .Vrvice. ,nnnt'c n..kl;,...i:n.- I,..t r,-n,l nnlHKIIW Itfirii place to oc a usetul source ot iniorma-; ... ,lnmcdav ,,nnV .., tion for researchers conducting in- frs, w(l!i; retwd 0, tl, pr0wr. ! Commission awarded a 510 mil CHILOQUIN The Winema Ex change, a new business on me corner of Chocktoot and Second streets in downtown Chiloquin, will soon open its doors to tnc general public, according to the owners, Mr. and Mrs. John Ka lita. The Kalilas have announced they will operate the small loan company m conjucuon wu" insurance ollice. tne iwo uusi- ncssos will be adjacent. Kalita I AlfHl ,d he will be able to nana. J I (J If- HWUl U all types of insurance including; SALKM iLPIi-Allstatc Insur ance Co. was awarded the 1963-64 contract on state-owned motor ve hicles. Freeman Holmer, director ol the department of finance and ad ministration, said Allstalc's bid was $147,363, down $7,000 from last year's bid. It marked the fourth successive year of lower auto insurance premiums lor the state, Holmer said. The contract, providing personal injury and property damage liabil ity, is awarded annually on a competitive bid basis. Coast Highway Gcp Is Bridged Columbia River. When it is completed, U. S. Highway 101 will extend from the Mexican border, where it is known as Kl Camino Real. The King's Highway, to Paget Sound. The two-lane bridge will re- ferry service between .Vtoria and Point r.iuce. " Ihe. Thc Oregon Slate iiiguwa) o- plant locations ,v ..,. iiVine in Knnl'anrf .-.ml. linn contract to the American and other purpo's. as well as a ;,jlf. iim0,in; Ilic land they owned fridge Division of the L-niled valuable guide for buyers oni,,, :,., ,.,,. ,pl,, mii.,Jk,.,s Coi uoration for the for Richfield Oil. Along with the gold-engraved redwood jsources of Oregon-maniifac lured pu t ,1,-1 .(-d at the command of ! structural steelwork ol the Ply,-L-ft fnr liticminrl i . , n L piaqUS qgei a bllCLK lUl ' "V nwo'U n riiDun w I " ',,n , n n linillcll. ahlv was the first American1 ,he 36th annual convention o the Oregon State Feder ! ation of Garden Clubs in Portland. GUARANTEED TRUCK SERVICE AND REPAIRS We're Specialists on 4 - wheel drive Willys 'Jeep' vehicles, but we ore equipped to serv ice all makes. JOE FISHER Lincoln, Mercury, Comet Willys 'Jeep' vehicles 477 5.. 7th PS. 104 Cmirgency Ptonf: Charlit Ramp. 2-4958 Fund Gets S22 Million COMPLETE u.ih.m ,if Normamlv -,(. t,ri,l,io 'I'm lrncc will nae a S. II. Mallicoat, direi tor of the ,, i, .....inui'i-ifl i- n..'-,,, ;! ,,r nom-lv 2 .VK) feet and will department, said cooperation I ioi'r manufacturers in returning "'" hhim soan be 193 feel above the water. More than 22 million dollars has i been credited to the (ieneial Fundj' finm icvcnues received fn,m ;:.'.l heritance and gil1 taxes, interest earning, and one-half of fines .tcieived fiom d. strict, ju-lice anil municipal cotn'.s by Slatej Troi-u:er Howard ('. Helt..n questionnaire promptly would k help expediatc completion ol the big statewide project. during the hicnnium ending .lone ;n. l'ii..l. There a S14.14'.',:i90 received ftom inhentaiHe and gilf laves. 6:70o. 5V, leprcsen'ed rai nines from inwMments, and il.34n.s(C was remitted to the stale tiea-ur-er by district, juslo c and munici pal cou its representing one-half ol various criminal and traffic vio lations in which the sta'e pal In ip.itt - a, cotdir.g to lirltun. i Let us supply the forms you need ... all types of printed folders, circulars, letterheads, checks, statements, snop-out forms, plastic binding, etc. Guide Printing, Inc. 12th & Klamath TU 4-5373 Are You Planning a New Office? Is Your Reception Room Inviting? Let Our Office Planning Experts Design Your Requirements No Obligation Investigate Our Leasing Plan, or Terms if you desire! $dwa 'Office Supply 629 Main ft Ph. TU 2-4408 FAST EFFICIENT SERVICE mnt, vow wnt tltl pe libit itrwict but alts 1M tafftl. WH, tilh arc availablt whtn you rtouatt Con to I ill tad Pra'htwayi. Ovirmqhl dtlivt'V from Part land and many other ponti in tn waif, piui taia, afticianl handling of your fraighl. fnr larvlca phoflt. Information TU 4-4151 FREE ERECTION ON GRAIN BINS When You Order 2 or More Bins During the Month of July! PIAyIFSfE! Look for the Butler trademark before you buy Butler quality (jrttn bins are pre-enRinccred to exact ing 8tndani by the men who know (train storage best. They go up quickly - last longer. They give you the safest, most dependable storage you can buy. What's more . . . it's easy to convert Butler bin Into an on firm drying system If you decide to store AND dry your gTaln. It costs little more to own the very best. As your authorized local Butler dealer, well be happy to dis cuss your grain storage needs with you. Just give us a call or stop by. There's do obligation. Headquarters for ell Sutler farm structures and equipment LOW DOWN PAYMENT ifnnmGTon Stsol Building Co. 5059 Bryant Ave. TU 4-3334 i 1