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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1963)
4. s . HERALD AND Pgr ,V-HfR i43ffc- " RIIRMA SURGEON Dr. Pardon Stifler Saaarave. the World War II, now 66, still goal on with hii work and is a living legend. Left, Dr. Sea " nrJUA I thftwn Jit h! KUmlrhjim halnital in I960. Riatit. file photo snows Dr. Sea- drave being driven in ieeD 1942. leaky Pipe Demands Fast Action, Not Panic By MR. FIX Newspaper Enterprise Attn. A leaky water pipe means time for ' fast action, but not panic. - Tfrst thing to do is to turn "off-the water. There may be a " - Valve for that line alone, If not, ''tart off the main water supply. 1 " ' With the pressure off, you have r lifle for an emergency repair. -Best method, and one that will last indefinitely, is the use of a special pipe clamp made for Just this purpose. The pipe clamp consists of two metal halves that fit around the pipe. The inside of the metal is lined with rubber. Nuts and bolts draw the clamp tight once it is in place. ; If you don't have a pipe clamp on hand and the time Isn't appro priate to run to the hardware store for one (these things always happen at night or on Sundays or holidays), then look around tlio house for materials with Vhich you can improvise. . An old piece of garden hose Is an excellent substitute. Split it and place it around the pipe. WHEN PIPES SPRING A LEAK FIRST THING TO DO TUHN OFF WATK 5UPFLY TO TURN OFF! TIGHTEN BOOKCASE , . IIIHWI'iI I i RADIATOR ENCLOSURE i I USE IMOiTOAAAKE PROVIDEADEQUATE CLEARANCE FOR RADIATOR AND ! FRAME. WE AND I NAIL BUTT JOINTS I OR USE DADO JOINTS ' IF YOU HAVE A VALVE I POWER SAW ADJUSTABLE SHELF I STANDARDS 1 ---------C. L I Paint Flakes CIIICACO (UP1 Those color ful little flakes of paint that chip off old furniture and walls look tasty to smal chidren. nut once popped Into their mouths, the panicles can cause permanent brain danagc, and In some cases, death. The Chicago Board of Health alone has recorded so far this Jear, 170 cases of lead poisoning. Inducing 14 deaths. In all these 6mi, it said, lead-based paint g contained the poison. lost of the cases in Chicago were of children under three years f dt age. .Poor living conditions, where rundown buddings have walls with many layers of paint on litem, '; plus malnutrition, plus the care lessness of parents add up to the . lead poisonings, the board said. A child's constant itate of hun ; ger often brings on pica, an ah 4 normal urge to eat everything in J light, the board said. ;.;.Te board and the pain! Indus- NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. bv Burmanete nurse on medical This can be held In place with a hose clamp. You may need the size used for radiator hose. If you lack a clamp, use wire twisted tightly around the patch. A generous use of friction tape is another method. But since the tape is porous, use some other patching material with it. A piece of rubber cut from an old inner tube or other rubber item is best used by placing it directly over the break. Then wind tape or string around this patch very tightly. Wrap plenty of tape around the area. tacking a piece of rubber, just use plenty of tape in many layers going in both directions. Remember, that though this sort of patch may not be com pletely waterproof, it will stop the spray until you can make a permanent repair. A leak that occurs near a Joint may indicate that the joint needs repair. Threaded fittings must be taken apart and coated with pipe compound before being put back together.. A soldered joint will have to be taken apart and cleaned of all the old solder. A bad spot in a run of copper pipe is cut out and rejoined with a copper sleeve that fits over both ends. If the pipe in your house is steel or galvanized iron, cutting out the bad part and joining the parts together will require threading the ends and joining them with a union. If you can remove both pieces of pipe you can take it to a hardware store to be threaded. Unless you're an expert, It's best to call in a plumber to make those permanent repairs. MATCH BASEBOARD 12 FRAAAE. STAPLE ALUMINUM GRILLE TO BACK. INSTALL 2 BULLET CATCHES TO i T..M a? n AMD C A V P Dangerous try are norking togetlier to Mu - cate parents to the hazards of; eating paint. The health department ex plained that a child can be nib bling on paint all winter without a reaction. But once the rays of the sun begin to work on tlie bones of a child, with lead in his v "in ,1 .hr. in 11 i. i, Vlw mnr llon ta red' mmnl' hevause go - a problem loaded with politi.n,"""n ucm ml,s Pms. I. , .. rJn n ,u 7j!'Of duet delinquency. The organi-ical complexities. There is no The question of whether the as han the winter Miation has little likelihood ol collec- trouble collecting lor the regular iwmhly w,ll trv to penalize the ' ting massive arrears of members, administrative budget, although'dehnqucnts rtill remains. Under Health authorities agree that.uhirh tnlilerf 1I79 million of ll,.r I. inr...,n. -.kl lArhrle 19 of Ihe rhrlr . carry reporung is imperauve si! .iu iu mmm epmrnii- pabl means ol financinf future ological slucaes which could bipipeac operations such as the Con - prevent future cases. L0 (0NUC) ,nd lhe Middle East The paint Industry says It has eliminated all lead from paint designated for horn Interior sur faces and all but one per cent from paint with a drying compo nent. Some states have ruled that paint containing lead must bear labels indicating the percentage. Sunday, Ortohrr 6, 1963 I famed "Burma Surgeon" errand somewhere in Burma . UPI Telephoto HELPING HAND Dr. M. Amorican nhviician to work f 0 ' : ii . mm m$ til street in Namkham, Burma, with his family. He holds daughter, Schelli, I, while his Vife walks hand-in-hand with other two children, Eric, 4, and Thor, 6. Man at right is unidentified. UPI Telephoto Three-In-One Table At first glance, this coffee table appears to be like others of com parable design. A close look, how ever, reveals three tables nesting in the space occupied by one This three-in-one, huild-it-yourself piece of furniture has many uses. The slide-out tables permit ex- lending the 4 ft. mother table to almost II ft. length, or smaller tables may be used separately. Simple in design, it blends per fectly with other furnishings re gardless of period. Step-by-stcp directions outlined in the pattern offered below sim plify building. It provides a com plete list of materials and ex plains where and when each is used. The full-size patterns indi cate exact location whenever two parts are fastened tocether. The routed nut design may be finished with decorator blocks while the balance of the table is stained Send 50 cents in coin, check or money order for Extending Coffee Table Pattern No. 4.'2 to Herald and News, P.O. Ftox 215, Biiarcliff Manor, New York. A new catalog illustrating over 3(10 other pattern projects ai,d home improvement books is available at Ml cents ex tra. Add 25 cents per pattern if ynu want special handling. UN Faces Serious Money Problem UNITED NATIONS. N Y. (UPD The so-called Fast-West amity so iar has done nothing to ease an old familiar United Nations bugaboo money. The current 18th General As sembly session started on Sept 17 in an atmosphere of optimism generated by Hie partial nuclear lest ban treaty concluded by the United Slates. Britain and the So viet Union. There was great hope that tlio relaxation of culd war ten sion would open the way for more international agreements and pro gress by the United Nations. Rut to veteran hands in the Hoi - i.a day operation of the world organization there was one cold, practical factor that could burst the balloon of high hopes: The United Nations Is deep in debt and, because of the money short age, is dangerously close to for feiting its primary purpose of maintaining peace and security. By the end ol 19M, the United .S.l!N'- ' ' m"h"'S - the future of the Con - ioAu 31i 8n(1 ,ckJ t mulua;;y ac Emergency Force (UNEF) in the! Ga Strip. like to ignore the Congo matter. Though the financial crisis has lit seems likely it will come to a become lamiliar tale of woe head in the assembly's fifth Ibudg since (lit Congo trouble erupted jetaryi committee rarlv next in I'.xw, there is an interesting new element this year. The So viet Union Is nearing the point Burma Surgeon Still Busy Despite Old Age And Illness NEW YORK (UPI i In a tin- roofed hospital on a lonely Asian frontier, a stubborn old man bends daily to the task of help ing the sick. His chest is sunk and his onee- sturdv body is wracked with amoebic dysentery. But Dr., Cor don Stifler Scagrave, now 66, is a living legend. The "Burma sur geon" goes on with his work. Some 40 years ago, as a young Johns Hopkins graduate, Sea grave fished some used and bro ken medical instruments out of a wastebaskct, tucked a Bible un der his arm, and set out for Namkham in the far northeastern corner of Burma. The hospital he took over was a decaying wooden building with 20 wooden beds. Its only patient a man with a leg ul cer. Today on a hillside overlooking that same green valley, 2 miles h ,1 Donald Olmanson, 32 with "Burma Suraeon.' of St. 7 7- sitV VJHP5 TABLE TRIO This three-in-one, build-it-yourself set of coffee tablet can be used in many ways. Underneath tables can be pulled out to form one long piece of furni ture or can be used separately. where it could lose its assembly vote liecau.se of dues delinquency, a contingency that might shakeiOetcilicr If supply lines and troop the loundalions. Secretary General Thant hasiullliout costly reanangemcnts. warned that the United Nations: mv ,h0 showdown develops, simply cannot conduct Its business sme diplomats leel, could have much longer if tlio treasury is consequences reaching far bevond empty. 1-ast July lie called (or ajthe purely monetary considera recluction in U. N. activities event0n, though membership has grown to! ",,,, AnH ,. 111 nations trnm the original 51, and requests fur help have multi ped. Because of the lark of money, Thant has suggested the with drawal of the Congo force, the main dram on the treasury. And there is talk that he wants UNEF, which has been a Middle East fixture since the 1956 Suez crisis, reappraised by the assembly with an eye to "phasing out" the mili tary force. U. N. budgetary experts are al most unanimous in agreeing that a clarification of Ihe liscal muddle!Cub ",xl YlK"--layiai owed an-j about the steady ri in figures 'Th budget total for this vear was !bout W9 million, and estimate for I9M run close to iion million Though most diplomats would month Thant has assembly authnrlialjon to spend money in Ihe Congo only until Dec. 31. He from the Red China border, some 15.000 backward hill people walk, ride or are carried on litters each year io me nlp.idi ...puu..u "Daddy aeagrave built for : ' "y , '" years and the infant mortality estimated 400.000 people dependJa(6 cent ..-n- m n,.nu nim'r.nn 39 -1 lanky doctor from St. Peter, I J"'" Pinl?' l'ed 'r Minn., who is the first American I weeks and died. No incuba nhvsician to work with Scaerave"or' and return to this country.! flipped a switch in his New York! hotel room. The Droblems Sea-i grave's medical outpost battles were displayed in alarming clar - itv on one of rha walls. Medical slides of patients rid- died with malaria, ehonorca. tu- berculosis, leprosy, smallpox, acute anemia . . . disturbing al-1 most horrifying to a healthy American. ' Peter, Minn., is the first 'On an average," he said "Sea- rrr .4 . : , Dr. Olmanson in recent photo is in Useful lhas warned that nn extension of the authorization must come in deployments are to tie maintained ' ,. .,.,. .h. of the Soviet Union, its Commu nist allies, France. Smith Africa, Belgium and some others to pay their shares of Congo costs. It is ,.;,j j... .... j .. As of Aug. .11. U.-N. members owed a total $100.5 million for the Congo operation, including assess ments until the end of this year. Of this, the Soviet Union owed $3? million and the rest of the 10 member Soviet bloc 1 excluding Ir.' '! falling two years behind in pay mcnt of its assessments "shall" lose iLs vote in the assembly. The Soviet Union will be liable to such penalty on Jan. I unless it makes some payment in the meantime. Whether the other nations would try to force the Russians out is a moot point. Most diplomats feel that tlie United Nations would lose its impact without participa tion of the Communist countries. grave's patients have two or ,hree major diseases, sometimes M many aJ . ve DiseaseJ you sj , read ab()ut jn textbooks The jfe expcctancy 29 "That was a 2-pouncr infant Help has come from American drug companies i about S230.000 worth each yeari, the Burmese ;govcrnment and a U.S. fund-rais- ;'ng g""P called the American i Medical Center for Burma. But ;the biggest problem by far is finding a successor 'for the flag. gmg oia doctor, Deioved ny tne Burmese. DAC Seeks To Preserve Area's Past (Continued from Page 1) maining years of his life, on the piece of land where he and Bitsy settled to raise a family after his trading days were over. That old home place, the land he tilled at the foot of Topsy Grade, will soon lie deep beneath the water behind a Pacific Power and Light Company dam, a cas ualty to man's need. ihe fur trader who traversed the mountains and the valleys, Martin Frain, lies buried in Way Cemetery in a spot above Topsy Grade not too far as the crow files from where he established his trading post on Link River. vRemaining members of his fam ily are his son. Wren, of Klamath Falls; a grandson, Hardman Frain, son of Roderick. Klamath Falls; Edwin Owens. Medford, a great - grandson, son of Nettie Frain Way: Vera Clemens, grand daughter, Klamath Falls; Halleck Doneldson, Newport, Ore., great- grandson; three great great grandsons and one great-great granddaughter. Placing of the marker in mem ory of one who helped settle the West, is one of the contributions made by Daughters of American Colonists to their community. Ob ject of the organization is patrio tism, slanted to history and edu cation in research. Members are specifically interested in the his tory and deeds of the American Colonists, in fostering love of America and its institutions by all Americans; obey the laws of the land and venerate the flag the emblem of its power and civic righteousness. - Klamath Chapter DAC was or ganized No. 16. 1957, with Mrs. William D. Foster as organizing regent. Charter members were Mrs. Foster, Mrs. Roland E. Wright. Mrs.' Arch C. Proctor, Mrs. Al bert O. Roenickc. Mrs. Louis H. Stone, Mrs. Bert C. Thomas, Mrs. Charles K. Wells, Miss Eva Burk haller, Mrs. Rcymond Hall. Mrs. Williams B. DeWitt, Mrs. Robert C. Odcll. Mrs. R. K. Schoubne. Mrs. Dick Ilcnzel, Mrs. Raymond Tice, Mrs. George H. Proctor. Mrs. Guy Barton. Mrs. Rudolph Paygr, Mrs. Jack W. Wright and Mrs. William L. Wales Jr. The charter was closed April 15, 1959,' by Mrs. Arch G. Proctor. first chapter regent who served lor 1938-159. Other regents have been Mrs. Albert O. Roenicke 111." WHO; Mrs. h. H. Stone. 190- l!Kil; Mis. George H. Proctor, I9A1-19K2. and Mrs. Charles K. Wells. 1982-19M. Klamath Chapter has. except for one volume, a complete DAC lineage library. The chapter has also lecn awarded a nations! award for outstanding work on Patriotic Education in sponsoring "Washington Poem Contest Poems bv school students were published in the Herald and News near Washington's Birthday. The Martin R. Frain, "Pioneer Fur Trader" marker will add to the CAR record of community 1 service Family DESIGN 510 HMM 1.0U So Si. ltd. Oart 1174 C. H. i--'kiiki t f V v-'.M.t-- f i Hi v-o r V-' t ' 4 I wife $ f 4 Aj K wtf ' v ' ' !, . A 1r4e..4.,' til f-t.-f f,1 r kAiy.?)i. ? ,iji -ir W ?' -M Nv mi I j St Hit mmm limn-int T' niii'fr aXJ KIDNAP FIGURES Kidnapers of Bobby Greenleaf, Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady and Carl Hall handcuffed are closely guarded as they are led from fhe eounfy jail t( federal building for sentencing in Kansas City in a 1953 photo. UPI Telephoto Half Of Ransom Remains Missing 10 Years After Green I ease Crime By JOSEPH CARTER And WILLIAM COOK KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI) - Ten years ago in September, a B-year-old boy was kidnaped and for nine anxious days the world watched and hoped while mas sive efforts were made to obtain his safe release. But Bobby Greenlease, It later was learned, was murdered about an hour after he was abducted the victim of a depraved, money- hungry couple. The world was stunned. Rea soned newsmen filed their stories when complete details were di vulged Oct. 7, 1953. , Then they; went to private places and wept. The kidnaping for ransom, a crime more frequent in the Unit ed States than elsewhere, rocked Europe. Americans were up in arms and tile government acted quickly. On Dec. 18, less than three months after the crime. Carl Austin Hall, 34, and Bonnie Brown Heady, 41, were executed at the Missouri state prison. Why such a crime? It was the same motive that in spired the Lindbergh kidnaping 21 years earlier money: $600,0001 85 pounds of $10 and $20 bills. Officers recovered half the ran som that Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Greenlease vainly paid for their son. Even today, a decade later, about $300,000 remains missing. Even to the gas chamber, Hall denied knowledge about the miss ing money. Many were suspected but the money its serial num bers known never was found In substantial quantities. Home Adaptable To Terrain Basically, the home offers liv ing on three levels. Because of its design, you tend to identify it with a rolling site. While the home can be adapted to rolling terrain, FIUIIV on I-' BtDoooy h-i'4A-o' ii-ii'.iocr oihini J- !l tt(Mm 1 1 '.so' ! '-(. IV-f ' LIVIN I . fitDROOtt I V. BUILDING PLANS TLA.N BOOKS ORDER FORM Herald and News Plan Dept. FAMILY HOMES 2900 Alpha St., Lansing, Mich. I want Items checked: Design No: 4 sets of Building Plans A Specifications, with Material LIU $29.75 1 set of Building Plans ft Specifications, with Material List 17.M Family Homes Plan Book, postpaid 7$ Enclosed find $ for Items checked. NAME ADDRESS , CITY STATE Homes rtrnrrBiiniiiiirinn The kidnaping occurred at 11 a.m., 10 years ago, at the French institute of Notre Dame de Sion, where Bobby was a stu dent. Mrs. Heady, a drunken di vorcee, appeared at the school where she identified herself as the boy's aunt. She said Mrs. Greenlease had been stricken and she had been sent for the child. An unwittine taxicab driver took Mrs. Heady and Bobby to a midtown drug store. He later re called that in that drive of half a dozen blocks, in which Bobby lost his last chance for life, the talk was of ice cream. Hall, who had squandered a small, inherited fortune and turned to armed robbery when it was gone, was waiting in a station wagon at the drug store parking lot. . They drove across the state line into Kansas. There, in the browning stubble of a wheat field. Hall tried to choke the boy but the rope was too short. A shot in the head finally killed him. Bobby's body, wrapped in a plastic sheet, w as hauled to Mrs. Headv's neatly-kept home at St. Joseph, Mo., where the pair buried it in a grave of quicklime. Mrs. Heady camouflaged the freshly - turned earth with chry santhemums. Mrs. Heady said she was drunk most of the days that followed But Hall who preferred nar cotics wrote letters and tele phoned the family. He had care fully selected his victim on the basis of college day memories. Hall and Paul Greenlease, son of the wealthy Cadillac dealer by a it is equally adaptable to a level lot. . Contained In its compact 1,100 square feet of living space are three bedrooms and bath on top TaTTI 11 r I I I 1 OoTurrr JLL EM: unit iet I iM'.io-r I ml tvvtVuvtti I previous marriage, had attended the same mid-Missouri school. On the night of Oct. 4, after elaborate dealings, the ransom', was dropped along a lonely road. ' Hall gathered up the money. which he had correctly calculated would be about all he could carry. The couple drove to St. Louis and rented an apartment. Hall then left his drunken paramour and went on an orgy and spend ing spree. Acting on a tip from a taxicab driver who reported the free spending fare, St. Louis de tective Lt. Louis Shoulders ar rested the pair. Confessions fol lowed and convictions under the Lindbergh kidnap law were peedy. Shoulders was praised for his police work, then questioned about the missing $300,000. He resigned in (he backwash. Hall and Mrs. Heady wrote let ters of penance to the Green lease family, shared a moment of death-row kisses and did not complain about their fate. Hall was the son and sole heir of a plcasantnn. Kan., attorney who left him $200,000 which he spent on high living. He was a pa rolee and in direful economic conditions when he met Mrs. Heady at a St. Joseph tavern five months before the kidnap murdcr. He conceived the crime and she was a tool. . , Mrs. Heady was from a respec table Clearmont, Mo., family that carefully reared her. She lived a normal life until her drinking dis rupted her marriage and brought a divorce. level; living room, dining area, kitchen and family room on the ground level. In addition, on the primary level, there is a roomy garage and utility room. Front entrance introduces guests to the home's grade level areas a broad expanse of living space gained by combining living room with dining area. Between the dining area and family room is the kitchen. Un crowned and with plenty of coun ter and cabinet space, this home maker's workshop is a model of efficient planning. Meal prepara tion space is distinct from the cleanup area but a pro jecting counter brings them to a few feet of each other. The coun ter also doubles as a divider for the family room. Here's where family activity will center. A rear exit opens out to the backyard encouraging construction of the future terrace. Access to the utility room and garage is available from the kitchen, a feature certain to be appreciated by the homemaker Housed in the utility area is a laundry area and heating plant. The sleeping area is effectively removed from the remainder of the house. Access is gained from the dining area. The ornamental iron railings used on the modified stairway are interesting. To avoid any traffic compli cations on the third level, a hall way was created connecting the three bedrooms with the bath as well es the stairway. This plan conforms to general FHA. VA and Building Code re quirements. You can obtain build ing plans with specifications and material list - see order coupon. 4L WASH YOUR HAW THE NfW tASYWAY STITE'S PLUMBING A HEATING 2011 Ortn Art TU 4-371 I V