HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Fal!. Oregon
Friday, September 13. 1963
PAGE 3-A
Forest District Notes
Changes In Personnel
Solon Says
GOP Too
Won' Pass
LAKEVIEW - Several person-i
nel changes on the Drews Valley
district of the Fremont Nation
al Forest are reported by Don
Allen, district ranger.
Robert J. Duncan was recently
transferred to the district to be in
charge of range and wildlife man
agement and land uses. He came
tn the Fremont from the Umpqua
National Forest, where he was
the timber management assistant
on the North Umpqua district.
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan and their
three children reside on North 12th
Street in Lakeview.
John M. Richardson Jr. was
also recently transferred to the
Drews Valley district to be in
charge of limber management
work on the district. He came to
the Fremont from the Malheur
National Forest, where he was
employed in the office of the su
pervisor on land exchange work.
Mr. and Mrs. Richardson and
their young son are now living
on Goldmohr Terrace.
With the addition of a portion
of the former Thomas Creek ran
ger district to Drews Valley, there
have been several other changes
in personnel assignments. Richard
C. Hancy, who had been assistant
district ranger, is in charge of
fire control and timber stand im
provement work.
Maynard E. Nuss. formerly tim
ber management assistant on the
Thomas Creek district, has been
assigned as forester on the Drews
Valley district.
James Bracken, forestry tech
nician formerly assigned to the
Warner district, has also been as
signed to Drews Valley and is
employed on timber sale adminis
(ration work.
Glen F. Turner, scaler at the
Fremont Sawmill Company plant,
has been reassigned to the Drews
Valley district from the former
I Thomas Creek district.
Bus Problems
Eyed By Dunsmuir Board
DUNSMUIR In response to in
quiries made to the Siskiyou
County 1983 Grand jury about the
obsolescence of elementary and
high school buildings, the Duns
muir Elementary School board at
its monthly meeting Tuesday
night instructed Albert Kempton,
superintendent, to cooperate with
members of the grand jury in ev
ery way possible.
H. A. Meredith, veteran mem
ber of the school board, com
mented alter the meeting that
Dunsmuir's school facilities are
subject to unfavorable comparison
with some school plants elsewhere
in the county, but the solu
- tion of Uiis problem depends on
the willingness of the people of
' the district to bond themselves
for new buildings. Such a bond
1 issue placed before the elcmen
! tary school district in -1957 was
' defeated.
Kempton reported that there
are now 601 pupils in 21 classes
CAPITAL CRIME RISES
WASHINGTON 'L'PD Police1
Chief Robert V. Murray says
Washington's crime rate has
reached an all-time high and will
, continue to climb unless Con-
1 cress acts.
Murray said Thursday that!
Congress must remove restric
tions on the police department,
including the ban against so
! called investigative arrests.
and that some grades are being
combined to keep Die ratio of pu
pils per teacher as low as pos
sible. Kempton is teaching some
classes in the 7th and 8th grade
elective courses to keep these
classes small.
Bus schedules are being revised
in order to best serve the great
est concentration ol pupils, Kemp
ton reported, because most fami
lies having school children live
in the outlying areas of the town,
creating a transportation problem
for the centrally located school
Western Democrats Concerned Over John Birch Society
WASHINGTON tUPI) - One
of the South's most conservative
Democrats predicted today that
Republicans would lose their
House fight to tie budgetary
strings to an $11 billion tax cut.
This forecast from Rep. A. S
Herlong Jr., D-Fla., jibed with
private appraisals of Kennedy
aides who have been sounding out
southern Democrats in prepara
tion for the impending battle.
These aides were confident
that the GOP amendment would
fail to gain enough support from
southern Democrats to win House
approval, even if all Republicans
vote for it.
The administration-backed bill,
scheduled for House action t h e
week after next, would provide
two reductions in individual and
corporation income taxes. It
would cut taxes by $7 billion on
1964 incomes. The full $11 billion
in relief would take effect in 1965
The Republican amendment
would provide for automatic can
cellation of the second tax cut.
unless in -President Kennedy's
budget message next January es
timated spending of no more than
$98 billion for the fiscal year
starting next July 1 and (2) defi
cit spending were held to $3 bil
lion during the current Iiscal
year.
Other congressional news:
IDEOLOGY: A House subcom
mittee will hear from four
experts today in its investigation
of the nation's "ideological offen
sive." Several "people-to-people"
efforts aimed at winning the free
worlds battle tor men s minds
were outlined to the foreign af
fairs subcommittee on interna
tional organizations and move
ments. ' .
SALT LAKE CITV UPI -
Some Democrats in the West are
concerned about inroads of the
John Birch Society (JBS).
They're planning to fight what
they consider the JBS "menace."
The first interstate volley will
be fired at a three-day 13-state
Western states conference which
opens Thursday in the shadow of
the Mormon Temple.
Lucy Redd, Utah s vivacious
Democratic National Committee-
woman, expressed concern about
the Birch Society m an interview
"In Utah, we've got a real
problem with the Birehers," she
said. "I call it a sleeping, creep
ing situation. They ve had
stream of speakers and some
well staged productions."
In the 1960 presidential elec
tions, Republican Richard M Nix
on won all but three western
states. He lost Hawaii, New Mex
ico and Nevada only by an eye
lash.
Democrats hope for a more fa
vorable result in 1964, when they
expected their candidate to be the
same man John Kennedy. They
feci he s popular in the West.
Poor Growing Weafher
Hurts Some Basin Crops
Some Klamath Basin producers
of oats planted for harvest as
grain have had to change their
plans and make hay of their oats
due to poor growing weather this
summer.
So says Peyton R. Winn, dis
trict director for the USDA's Fed
eral Crop Insurance Corporation
at Klamath Falls. In discussing
crop conditions in the area Winn
commented on spotted frost dam
age to potatoes, excessive mois
ture on both oats and spuds and
generally poor growing conditions
affecting most irrigated crops
this vear. "Local fieldmen have
S6-39-40-43
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JK Your Doily AcliVil Guide M
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read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
31 Unuiuolly 61 Nth
3!B 62 Come
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34 Background 64 Power's
URRA
SEPT. 23 rf.
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It Worked
ATLANTA (UPI) - Smelling
gas in a vacant house he owned
Thursday, Charles A. Wiglcy, 68,
struck a match to see if a small
gas heater was working.
The resulting explosion
wrecked the six-room house,
broke windows in neighboring
homes and hospitalised Wigley
with burns from the waist up.
1 Firemen said the fumes were
escaping from an open gas pipe
in the kitchen where a stove had
been removed Wednesday.
Democratic Gains .are making strong pilches for the
But even thouch he nnlv wnn:6 Congressional seats up for
three Western states, Kennedy
did better than Adlai Stevenson.
the Democrats' presidential nom-!
ince in 1932 and 1956. He didn't
capture a single Western state
cither time.
"Certainly we have a rough row
to hoc," said Miss Redd. "But
we're not counted out by any
means despite what news media
say about it."
Roger Kent, California's party
vice chairman and head of the
Western Conference, said in
interview that the Democrats
need the West
"In order to carry these states
we must be aware of particular
Western problems and get at the
solutions, he said.
That's what the 1.000 or more
Democrats expected to attend the
Salt Lake City meeting plan to
do hear the problems and sug
gest solutions.
Miss Redd and Kent left no
doubt that tlve JBS and Civil
Rights they combine the two
will be one of the major topics
of the conference, the largest
such political get together in the
nation this year.
Political suurces feel that the
JBS and other right wing groups
grabs in the Western states next
year.
"It only makes good sense,"
said one Western Democratic
Party leader. "I'd do the same
thing if 1 had a limited amount
of honey to spread around."
Humphrey Will Speak
A major talk will be delivered
by U.S. Sen. Hubert H. Humph
rey of Minnesota. He'll speak at
a $100 a plate fund-raising dinner
Friday night.
But both Miss Redd and Kent
appear to believe the major in
terest at the conference would be
centered around a panel discus
sion titled "Civil Liberties and
the Right Wing." This panel will
form the strategy to fight the
Birch Society.
One of the panel participants
will be California Atty. Gen. Stan
ley Mosk, who once said the JBS
was largely "little old ladies in
tennis shoes." Another will be
California Gov. Edmund G.
Brown.
Others on the panel will be Sen.
Gale W. McGce of Wyoming, Sen.
Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, Rep.
Joseph Montoya of Ncs Mexico,
Hep. Augustus Hawkins of Call-1 Arizona, and Carmen Warschaw
fornia, Rep. Morris K. lUdall oflof California.
HAVE YOUR
CAR WASHED
. . . Automatically In It it than IB
tnlnaUi, ft. 1ft.
Sparkle Car Wash
4023 Ss. Sixth
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID
On new 1500 foot wing to be added on Klamath
Medical Clinic, 1905 Main. Brick and wood con
struction, existing electrical and air conditioning
to extend from presont building.
Bids will be opened at 7:30 P.M., September 26th
at the Clinic.
Plons and specifications available from
Glon Evans, Business Manager
Klamath Medical Clinic.
No Money Down
When We Build An
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ON YOUR LOT!!
Or our talesmen can tell you how to have your
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Set the Echo Hemes under construction now at Delta
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MODEL HOME OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
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ECHO HOMES
103S Appleweod E. and of Reclamation TU 2-0)26
been busy adjusting losses or
oats, potatoes and grain on wide
ly separated farms in the Basin," I
he said. 'Most fields of spuds hurt
by frost on June 28 and July 8
are recovering very well due to
excellent care by the producers,
and unless serious damage oc
curs before the middle of Sep
tember, a normal crop may be
harvested."
Winn assisted in a training ses
sion at Ontario last week where
potato grading procedures, were
reviewed by State-Federal Inspec
tion 5ervice personnel for the
benefit of FCIC adjusters. The
school was attended by Dan House
of Dairy, local corporation field
man, who will take further in
struction under the direction of
Leonard Kinney, Klamath Basin
inspection service supervisor.
This cooperative assistance by
the inspection service is much ap
preciated by FCIC people, Winn
said, and will result in a much
better understanding of the insur
ance program by all concerned
as digging of the Basin potato
crop begins. Early planted fields
that escaped frost injury are
I nearly ready to harvest with some
excellent yields expected in warm
er parts of the Basin.
Ifcurtfend
Life Insurance, that fs. (Same
good deal as Stats Farm car in
surance.) Stats Farm's new tins
oMifs Insurance gives you a
choice ol 26 policies with loads
of new features for up-to-date
protection at down-to-earth
costs. For full details, see your
friend for life.
LYNN COLBY
1229 Main
TU 2-3673
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Before and
after
the game!
Either time, or both times
are fine times to visit
the Roundtable
of the Winema Motor Hotel.
Enjoy sizzling steaks,
tasty chops, superb sea foods,
and your favorite
refreshments in Klamoth's
finest dining room
and lounge.
Winema
Motor Hotel
1111 Main
J
AT SHAWS
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And people who write a lot
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The point is solid UK gold, end comes in seven widths.
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for only J5, you get the pen, a cartridge, and the
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smhin a year, it will be replaced lie Detnlj of offer
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Sold new for $450
Monarch
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Wood end electric. Excellent
RCA Victor
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Silvertone
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fi&Mwfafe with Quae
1001 Main
STORE HOURS: 8:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Ph. TU 0-8183
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