Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 11, 1963, Page 8, Image 8

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    V -a- f
Better Grades 12
Vtfatf, Graprs Gwi Improve Understanding
By The Reading Laboratory I and resurvey" meOiod of studying
written lor la textbook chapter. You survey
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. the chapter several times: first,
We've discussed the "survey read the summary, the largest
"Better Grades" Reader Service ,
co Herald and News
Box 941
Klamath Falls, Oregon
Please send me copies of
30 DAYS TO BETTER GRADES at $1 each.
Name
Address
City State
bold type, and study the maps,
graphs and picture captions to
find the main ideas; second, read
all of the bold type. Then read
the first sentence of each para
graph to find the secondary ideas;
skim the entire text to get a
stronger grasp of the secondary
ideas, and, finally, check off
the major details that may re
quire memorization.
In this method, the first step
is the most important. If you
get the main idea of the chapter,
everything else will make sense.
And the most valuable tools you
have to find the main ideas are
Uie maps and graphs.
Th old saw says that a pic-
The
DANMOORE
HOTEL
1217 S.W.. Morrison St.
Portland, Oregon
All Transient Gueili. All Ihoae
who eoma return. Retee nol to
blsb, not low. Free garage, new
location block from Uotel.
Open nntll 10 P.M. TV's and
Radial. Reputation for clean
llneaa. Children ander seven, no
charge.
IBS
Report of Condition
of
The Bank of Klamath Falls
of Klamath Falls in the State of Oregon at
the close of business on Sept. 30, 1963.
ASSETS
1. Cash, balances with othtr banks nd cash Html In process
of collection 7??,631.1
2. United Stales Government obligations direct and guaranteed 889,100.13
3. Obligations of States and political subdivisions . 133,891.43
6. Loans and discounts (Including 15,693.80 overdrafts 1,817,262.83
7. Bank premises owned $80,857.97, furniture and fixtures
116,401.91 97,?59.B8
11. Other assets 27,906.86
12. TOTAL ASSETS 3,688,053.04
LIABILITIES
13. Demand deposits of Individuals, partnerships, and corporations 1,192,174.12
14. Time and savings deposits of Individuals partnerships, and
corporations 1,179,666.15
15. Deposits of Unlled Stales Government (Including postal
savings) 1W.9BI.3B
16. Deposits of Statos end political subdivisions 399,530.67
17. Deposits of banks 350,000.00
IB. Certified end officers' checks, ele 26,956.74
19. TOTAL DEPOSITS U?51,311.06
(a) Total demand deposits 1, 706.644.91
(b) Total time and savings deposits $1,544,666.15
J. Olher liabilities 52,548 03
24. TOTAL LIABILITIES 3.303,859.09
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
?S. Capital, (a) Common stock, total par value WSO.OOO OO 250,000.00
26 Surplus , V i 56.700.00
27. Undivided prottls 77,493.95
29. TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 384,193.95
30. TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 3,688,053.04
MEMORANDA
31. Assets pledoed or assigned to secure liabilities and for olher
purposes Including notes and bills redlscounted and se
curities sold with agreement to repurchase! 666.592.34
I, Frank Tomlc, ot the above-named bank, do solemnly affirm that
this report of condition Is true and correct to the best of my knowledge
and belief,
CorrectAttest:
Frenk Tomlc
Directors.
Harry D. Bolvln
C. A. Henderson
, D, D. Reader
(SEAL)
Slate of Oregon, County of-Klamalh, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 9th day of October,
1963, and I hereby certify that I am not an officer or
director of this bank.
John R. Ellis, Notary Public
My commission expires 3-31-67.
N.W. Wheat
i
Not Going
To Russia
PORTLAND (UPI) - Much of
the surplus wheat sitting in rail
road cars in Oregon and Wash
ington will not go lo Russia, a
government official said Wednes
day.
Sydney Harris, manager of the
Portland Agricultural Conserva
tion and Stabilization Service
commodity office, said 1,100 cars
of wheat under federal ownership
on Northwest tracks has been
consigned to Asia.
"I don't know where the other
shipments are bound to," he said.
but ours is ticketed for Japan,
Korea, Okinawa, Formosa and the
Philippines."
About 6,900 railroad cars carry
ing privately owned grain also
are sitting on railroad sidings in
Washington and Oregon.
Harris said the federal gov
ernment has been bringing its
grain Horn the Midwest for the
last 15 to 16 months. He said the
8,000 car total was "heavier than
normal" but he attributed this to
the increase in prices on the
world market.
There has boon speculation the
grain was here for quick ship
ment lo Russia as soon as Presi
dent Kennedy approved the salcl
ture is worth a thousand words.
To a student laboring o v e r a
textbook, the maps and graphs
can be w orth much more.
One battlcline map of Grant's
Wilderness Campaign can tell
ou more than pages of text can
and its easier to remember.
A simple curve in an economics
text can define a law in con
crete, "guns-and-butter terms
that are much easier to under
stand than the abstract theoriz
ing of the text.
Yet lots of students seem to
be afraid of maps and graphs.
They can look imposing when
you don't understand them, but
the little time needed to decipher
them will pay tremendous divi
dends. Battlcline maps can be the
most confusing. The first thing
you should do is study the key.
For the Wilderness Campaign,
for instance, there may be a
solid line for Grant's troops and
a broken one for Lee's army. It'll
look complicated, but if you take
your time and follow the map
line by line, you 11 see the whole
pattern of the campaign as the
lines shift.
The same thing holds true for
battle maps using arrows instead
of lines. Just take it piece by
piece, arrow by arrow, and the
meaning will come clear.
Multiline graphs scare a lot of
students. But the same principle
holds. I ind In the key the mean
ing of each line and trace it sep
arately. Then, after you've under
stood each line, the graph itself
will begin to communicate.
Tables of statistics are another
student-scarer. Don't try 4o learn
them; it s foolish and timewast-
ing. Look for a pattern in the
statistics. If the entire table is
devoted to showing that the real
per capita income in the United
States rose from X dollars to Y
dollars in a certain period of
lime, be satisfied with knowing
that the income rose and about
how much it rose. Don't try to
learn each separate statistic; get
the main idea of the (able.
In general, you can get a lot
out of maps and graphs if vou
don't let them scare you. Just
go lo the key, find out what each
line or number means, then find
the overall idea behind the map
or graph and study it.
(Next: How a book Is different
from a television set.)
LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE
10OWM1
1 6 across l across 1
6 I I
7 f I 8 19
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'laddfid -z '3oi -i umoq -iivi 'u 'avsa -oi 'awvi s
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Bambuti Pygmies are about
the size of an eight-year-old child, i Supreme Court.
Receives Term
EUGENE (UPI)-Dr. Hjalmar
Gentle of Eugene was sentenced
lo twd years in the state peniten
tiary and fined $2,500 Wednesday
He was convicted of manslaugh
ter by abortion. Defense Attorney
John Osborn said the conviction
will be appealed to the Oregon
Appling Raps Both Sides
SALEM (UPI) - Secretary of
State Howell Appling Jr. said to
day he believed both sides in the
controversy over the legislature's
tax measure "have been guilty
CM Da&YS y KI
before you buy any new or used car!
I'll to i Ton Pmjhml 4 Speed PICKUP
Delivers with: VWSW Tires V Heater I Defroster VFactory Undercoat vVinyl
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tervice-all S.A.L parts Parts Immediately available
V12 months-12 000 mile factory warranty
DALE'S MOTOR CO.
333 So. 6th St.
Klomoth Foils
of overstatements."
"Press releases by some stale
agencies as to the specific cuts
that would result from a negative
vote have obviously been designed
to play on fears lo the maxi
mum," Appling said.
"On the other hand, the timing
of a forced reduction in stale
agency budgets and in slate aid
lo local schools adds lo the diffi
culty of accomplishing reform in
an orderly, discerning way. Some
reduction in the level of service
of important programs would un
(loubledly result from a negative
vole in those ciiumslanccs.
"I think the truth lies some
where between the extreme claims
being made by both sides," Ap
pling commented.
Homily
TVeelcly
SaiuCcd
NATIONAL
NEWSPAPERBOY DAY
and
NATIONAL
NEWSPAPER WEEK
with this spelal cover
rV-i
. . .
on lh feature-packed
OCTOBER 13TH
Weekend Issue
Read oW fee Infrtiling
stories and txdfing articles
kWlfc CGf tt9
SUNDAY
JferalijanbJkto;
Youth Survives 7 Hours
Painfully Pinned By Car
HOUSTON (UPII - Donald
Vlasek heard the braces giving
way and tried frantically to get
out from under the car that was
settling down on top of him in
a garage.
The University of Houston stu
dent felt the rear axle against
the side of his head and the full
weight of the vehicle slowly
pinned his skull to the concrete
floor Tuesday night.
For more than seven hours.
the 21-year-old former high school
football player screamed and
banged the side of the car with
his arms. No one heard him.
'I thought I was dead," Vlasek
said later.
Finally, his brother Travis Vla
sek, came into the garage early
Wednesday morning and found
him still conscious.
When wo found him he was so
hoarse from screaming you could
hardly hear him," the brother
said. Donald said in a very
calm manner to get the keys and
open the trunk and tack the car
up. His car was hurling him so
we had to be careful.
Travis, another brother, For
rest, 23, and the father, Frank
Vl:i,lr r.-lipH tlm frnninfl
Donald. I
Doctors at a Houston Hospital
where he was taken said Vlasek
received head injuries and a
mild case of exposure from lying
on the cold concrete all night.
He was in fair condition today.
Travis said his brother was
working on the rear end of the
newly purchased car and had it
supported by braces and a jack.
"He moved the jack and the
braces couldn't hold up the car,"
Travis said.
Donald was an all-state end at
Spring Branch High School in
1959. He played football at Hous
ton until a knee injury put him
out of action a year ago.
PAGE SA
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath FaUs, Ore.
Friday, October 11. 1961
Mildness Slows Deer Migration
LAKEVIEW Weather has not
been stormy enough to start the
migration of the interstate deer1
herd, according to word from the
Drews Valley district in the week
ly recreation report of the Fre
mont National Forest.
Nearly al of the deer
killed in Uie state line area have
been small resident deer; there
is no indication of the migration
herd at this time.
Hunting has been poor due to
dry conditions; fishing is still good
at Cottonwood Meadow lake. Cau
tion of logging traffic is advised
on the Dog Lake, Thomas Creek,
and Yocum Valley roads, as off
highway wide load trucks are be
ing used.
Fire danger is still high in all
districts because scattered show
ers were insufficient to wet down
forest fuels. Hunters are urged to
clear an area at least 10 feet
wide to mineral soils when build
ing fires in unimproved camp
sites. Several warming and cook
ing fires have gotten away since
hunting season began because this
precaution was unheeded.
Hunting success continues slot'
on the Bly district as a result of
hot dry weather the first week of
the season. People are cautioned
to look out for logging trucks on
the Fishhole road, the county
road to Camp Six, and Road No.
3610 from the Lee Thomas Mea
dow area to Bly.
There is some fallen timber
over trails in the Paisley district.
Fishine runs from fair to poor
on the Sprague, Chewaucan, and
Sycan rivers; Deadhorse and
Campbell lakes are poor areas
for fishing. If present cool air
continues, hunting should improve.
Hunters are urged to be very
cautious with warming fires on
the Warner district as the current
high winds could very easily cause
a campfire to escape.
Hunting is fair to good on the
Silver Lake district; fishing at
Thompson Reservoir is fair.
Campers at Silver Creek Marsh
camp are asked to bring their own
drinking water. All main roads
into Silver Lake have logging
traffic.
Ideal Location
DOWNTOWN
Business or Office
Inquire
GUN STORE
PROPAGANDA BATTLE
VIENNA, Austria (UPI) - Aus
trian Communists have received
anti . Soviet propaganda leaflets
printed in Peking with the re
quest to pass them on to attached
addresses in Communist East
Germany, informed sources said
here today.
The booklets were mailed to
Austrian Communists by the
"Chinese Society for Internation
al Relations."
DEER
HUNTERS!
LUNCHES
TO GO!
IT'S THE ODESSA FOR:
BREAKFASTS LUNCHES DINNERS
Delicious Fried Chicken, Sinling Sreaks,
Ham 'n Eggs as You Like 'eml
HOME MADE PIE SANDWICHES
ODESSA COFFEE SHOP
ROCKY POINT ROAD
Closed Mondavi ' Ph. EL 6-2250 Rocky Paint
Open 6 la 9 P.M. Far Reservations
NOWS THE TIME TO SAW WOOD!
jUBfcm or? rv.ii I
. Priced i A
(gOPp) ; From "J
Ifemington.
CHAIN SAWS
OUTCUT,
95 ril IT I ACT
ar7a aear-lh I
'EM ALL!
PIG TRADES LOW EASY TERMS!
J.W. MM
734 So. 6th '
Ph. TU 4-4197
ate
Please don?
shoof ycu
seethe light
tween us.
tf ?rotn me...
VeTUa&ar
LiVu pfr fjff wumt.ioo! bot they Wy
fiiA J 19 M-So uvx. os cows,.
PLIV fc CIVREUL
An Orgoniiotion of Klomafh Bosin Doirymtn who work around th. clock in ordtr to brina vou th. int
feaj-buc milk pOMibl. 87 '
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