Kitsap Sun from Bremerton, Washington (2024)

Jan. 5, 1961 Published every day except. Sunday by The Bremerton 545 Fifth St. Bremerton, Wash. Terephone ESSex 7-3711.

JACK MCHENRY Editor ALEX F. OTTEVAERE BUS Eftered ns second-class matter July 22, 1935, at the post office at BremenWashington, under act. of March 3, 1879- Official newspaper of the City of Bremerton, SUBSCRIPTION RATE: By carrier, 81.75 monthly. By mall, per month, 821 per year. All mail subpayable in advance ADVERTISING 1 RATES: Available on sequest.

General advertising representative Wet Holiday San Francisco, New York, Seattle, The Sun de a member the Audit Bureau of Circulation, the Associated Press and the United Press International. (The Associated. Press entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news appearing 1 The Sun, as well as all AP news dispatcher. Almanac Today is Thursday, Jan. 5, the fifth day of the year with 360 more to follow in 1961.

The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning star is Mars. The evening stars are Venus and Mars. On this day in history: In 1779, Stephen Decatur, called the most conspicuous figure in U.S. naval history between John Paul Jones and Adm.

David Farragut, was born. In 1895, Capt. Alfred Dreyfus, already convicted by a French court martial on charges of transmitting military intelligence to Germany, was summoned before an army garrison in Paris and subjected to degradation. In 1925, the first woman was sworn in as governor of a state. She was Mrs.

Nellie Tayloe Ross, governor of Wyoming. In 1949, President Truman labeled his administration the "Fair Deal." A thought for today: American naval officer Stephen Decatur said: "Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she, always be in the right; but our country, right or wrong. This Day BORN At Harrison Memorial To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Pruitt.

Belfair Star Rte. 3, Box 88-A, a Jan. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Boilinger, 1927 N.

Anderson Tacoma, a daughJan. 5. MARRIAGE LICENSES Louis Elias Cohen, 19, U8N, and Joys Isobel Cabibi, 25, Bremerton. DIED John W. Atkins, 84.

Washington Vethome, Retail, in. hospital there, Jane 4. Edward Buckler, 78. Washington Veterana home, Retstl, in hospital there, Jan. 4.

Samuel Augnew Larkin, 13, Washingtor Veterans home, in hospital there, Jan 4. Maude McKenzie, 85, Hillhaven home, Jan. 5. FIRE FIRST AID RUNS 1109 Thursday, Veneta 6:41 a.m. Anns Black.

alight stroke, fire department first-aid car to scene: priphysician called, treated at home LOCAL TIDES First low Firat high Secard low Second high FOR FRIDAY 1:14 a.m. 0.4 ft. 8:27 a.m. 12.4 ft. 2:31 p.m.

5.9 ft. 7:08 p.m. 9.2 SUNRISE-SUNSET Rises 7:59 a.m. Sets 4:34 Jam -Rises 7:59 p.m. Seta 4:36 p.m.

WEATHER Max. Min. Pre. Bellingham 42 BREMERTON .85 H6quiam .90 Or mpla 45 .75 Omak Seattle 40 Spokane Vancouver, B. C.

1.26 Walla Walla .06 Wenatchee Yakima Juneau 8 .01 Boston Chicago Denver Des Moines Fort Worth Helena 15 Honolulu Kansas City Las Angeles Miami Minneapolis-8t. Paul 26 New Orleans 36 York 32 Omaha 46 Phoenix 67 Salt Portland Lake City 35 San Washington Francisco 27 Butter and Eggs Seattle butter market was steady today at unchanged prices. Supplies adequate for local and shipping needs. -On eggs, the market was unsettied with dealers watching, price trends at eastern California markets. Supplies generally ample.

lobbing prices, of butter: AA prints cartons A prints prints .68. Jobbing prices of eggs: AA large AA mediums small A large Road Report Twenty Inches of new show fell overnight at Snoquaimie pass, 14 Inches at stevens pass and lesser amounts elsewhere in the Cascades, the state department reported today. The snow turned to light rain at Snoquamie by daylight but a few flakes continued to fall at Stevens, pass reports: Snoqualmie Raining lightly; 20 Miches new snow. 77 total; ice on road from 20 miles east and beyond, and and slush to 7 miles west; temper32. -Snowing lightly: 14 inches 74 inch total; compact snow and from 6 miles west to Cashmere; temperature 32.

White Overcast: 6 inches new snow, 86-total; mow and ice from 15 miles. west to Indian Creek; chains required; temperature 30. Blewett Overcast is inches new 24 total; compact snow and ice 27 miles north and beyond to 6 south and beyond; temperature CAUSE FOR TEARS LINCOLN, III. People having a good cry until Rite Chief Edgar Smith found the cause. A leaky valve on a sided ammonia freight car was shunted off to the edge of town, out of teach of tear.

ducts. 3 Veterans Home Men Succumb John Atkins -American war veteran John W. Atkins 84. died vester. day in the hospital of the Washington Veterans home, Retsil, after a long illness.

Born April 19, 1876, in Kentucky, Mr. Atkins lived in Texas for some years following his military service. He moved in 1907 to Darrington (Snohomish county), where he was employed by the state forestry department, and in 1950 to Retsil. Mr. Atkins worked for a time as a carpenter and also as a shipfitter's helper in PSNS.

Survivors. include five sons, Charles of Retsil, Lee and Lester of Arlington (Snohomish county), Doyle Renton and Arnold of Port Orchard; nine grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren. Services are being arranged at Pendleton-Gilchrist funeral home, Port Orchard. C. E.

Buckler A retired U. S. navy and Spanish-American war veteran, Carl Edward Buckler, died last night in the Retsil hospital of the Washington Veterans home. Death came after an extended illness. He was 78.

Mr. Buckler, born Aug. 7, 1882, in Franklin county, joined the U. S. army during the Spanish-American war.

After his discharge from the army, he worked as a machinist and traveled throughout the United States. He married Miss Lois Taylor in 1916 at Amity, four years after he- had joined the U. S. navy in which he served for 30 years. After retirement from the navy he settled in Seattle, and moved to Retsil in 1958.

He was a member of the United Spanish War Veterans McKinley camp 33, Retsil. Survivors include sons, Frank. of Aberdeen, Phillip with the U. S. army, Richard of Emerson, N.

and Eugene, and four grandchildren. Final services will be announced by Pendleton-Gilchrist, Port S. A. Larkin A resident of the Washington Veterans home at Retsil the past year and a half, Samuel Augnew Larkin, 73, died last night in the hospital there after an extended illness. Mr.

Larkin was born Sept. 22, 1887, at Pawnee City, Neb. He is survived by his wife, Eleanor vol Squamish. Services are pending at Pendleton-Gilchrist funeral home, Port Orchard. Half-Century Resident Is Stricken A 50-year pioneer Bremerton resident died this morning at Hillhaven Nursing home from a prolonged illness and several strokes.

She was Mrs. Maude McKenzie, 85. Her late husband, William, operated a transfer business in Bremerton for many years. Mrs. McKenzie was born in Missouri Nov.

1874 and lived much of her early years in Nebraska and McMinnville, before moving to Bremerton in 1910. She was active in: the First Presbyterian church and the Women's Christian Temperance Union. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Percy (Edna) Lipsky, San Jose, a son, Ralph, Chula Vista, and a stepson, Vern Allyn. Services are pending at Lewis funeral home.

Plastic Type ARLINGTON, Va. -(UPDlittle gadget that will enable you to use mathematical or musical symbols and foreign accent marks any typewriter cheaply is beon ing made Mechanical Enterprises, Inc. It consists of a special holder to go in the ribbon guides with hand inserted plastic type bars for the desired symbols. You hit any key to make he plastic bars print through the ribbon. Fresh and Smoked Oysters FRESH OCEAN CRAB SMOKED SALMON HALIBUT FRESH STEAMER CLAMS ABALONE SALMON NORWAY HERRING Home Pickled Herring LUTEFISK Salted and Fresh Black Cod Kitsap Seafoods Frog Legs, Fresh Steamer Clams, Heme Pickled Teeland Herring, HWY.

21-ERLANDS POINT Smoked and Kippered Salmon. JUNCTION Smoked and Salted Black Cod and Smoked Oysters, ES 7-5225 CLOSED MONDAY Chileno Has Yankee Spirit; Land Enormous Slice Of World (Jim Breetveld, UPI Newspic- tures photo editor, who wrote the following dispatch, is author of the recently published book "Getting to Know Chile" Editor.) By JIM BREETVELD The Chileno that's what the Chilean calls himself -is working hard these days to rebuild the cities and town, roads and bridges damaged by last: May's earthquakes and tidal He's been lucky in one way. Most. of the big tourist centers, the big ski resorts in the Andes and the lake country attractions like Osorno, Villarica and Temuco, escaped the devastation that fell on cities like Valdivia and Puerto Montt. Chile's bustling capital, Santiago, and her great port, Valparaiso, were untouched.

Gaining fast on copper and nitrates as the country's big moneymakers is "gold" of natural and man-made attractions which visitors to the string-bean shaped country are discovering. What is fun and play for tourists is bringing in money the Chilenos need desperately to rehabilitate the nation. THIS LONG, long, land that hugs the lower coast of South America for almost 3,000 miles is never much wider than 100 from the Pacific to Andes mountains. Yet this narrowest of nations offers the biggest and best of everything for the sportsman, the playboy, the shutterbug and the traveler. The first tourist to gape at the wonders of Chile was a bearded conquistador named Pedro de Valdivia, leading a ragged band of Spaniards on a mission of conquest in 1540.

Valdivia's golden dream of Chile stuck in his throat literally. He was captured by the Araucanian Indian Chief and while two Araucanians a Valdivia Lautaro, a third poured molten gold down his throat. Tourists today get better treatment. know because I also, invaded Chile from the north. winged into Santiago as a refugee from DC8 jet just half a day to do it.

winter. It took, my sleek Panagra With the seasons reversed below the Equator, Christmas in Chile is a holiday of swimming parties at the seashore and picnics in the Andean foothills. INSTEAD OF MOLTEN gold, the natives poured a "pisco sour" down my throat. "Pisco sour" is practically the national drink of Chile. It's made from a colorless grape brandy, tastes good and harmless, but it packs quite wallop.

hotel, the 17-story Carrera, could match any luxury hotel in New York. The first morning in Santiago I took a swim in the hotel's rooftop pool, ringed by restaurant, sun deck, sky and Andes mountains. Spread around and below me was a mass of tall office buildings, ornate cathedrals and churches, smoky factories, spacious parks, colonial mansions, Spanish -fountains, rainbow-h ed villas, jammed business streets, luxuriant gardens, broad avenues, modern apartment houses and sudden hills that shoot up from the very heart of town. The capped Andes push into a sky so blue it looks painted. FROM A TINY cluster of huts built by Valdivia's men on this broad plain beside the gray Mapocho river, Santiago has emerged as the fourth largest city in all of South America.

I wandered through the streets Misille Bilders Cann't Spel 'Cat' -Exekutive Cann't -Exekutive the classroom, they (students) expose themselves to lethal doses of illiterate television," 'he said. "They limit their reading to comics and sports pages, and speak a jargon which is a combination of beatnik idiom, rock-and-roll lyrics, and the neighborhood Odin said that although industry has been forced to spend these vast amounts of money to clean up engineers' copy, it is not always possible to find' men who can do the job. Odin urged that technical! schools step up their courses technical writers to serve in industry to put the words of the engineers into simple English. Judge on Stand DALLAS, Tex. (UPD Criminal District Judge Joe B.

Brown was on the witness stand instead of behind the bench at a domestic relations trial, but forgot that he wasn't the judge in the case. Judge Brown was testifying as a character witness when an attorney objected to a' question directed to the judge. "I sustain your objection on that," Brown said. The embarrassed judge was upheld by presiding Judge Beth Wright, who added a belated, "Sustained." DENNIS THE MENACE 9 0 SANTA MONICA, -(UPD -Engineers of today are graduating from colleges with the know-how to send men into space, but they can't spell "cat" or write a simple sentence. This lack of basic English is costing American industry millions of dollars a year, according to Victor W.

Odin, head of the engineering services department of Lear, an aeronautical electronics engineering firm. "Every company today has to employ a large number of skilled writers whose sole job is to re-do paper work of engineers so it is somewhat understandable to other engineers," Odin said. Odin said that some engineers and scientists in preparing papers for delivery at symposiums and conferences seem to take delight in seeing how complex they can make them. As a result not only are they not being understood but they don't even use basic English. Odin blamed the breakdown in the correct use of English and spelling of English words on the primary and secondary schools.

He said colleges as rule do not have the time to teach these basic things. He also blamed parents for not teaching their children good study habits, and he took a crack at television. 'FRANKLY, AL. I'M PAYING AN' HE WONT EVEN FOR A DEAD HORSE. BUY ME A APPLIANCE 901 No.

Wycoff Phone ES 7-3823 (Next to New West Bremerton Post Office) ICE CREAM CABINET Will Make Good ONLY Buy Home It Now Freezer $9995 Woman Hurt In Accident (of Santiago, looking for sleepy cabelleros dozing over guitars. But I found traffic so hectic it makes Times square Saturday night look tame. The hustle and bustle of Santiago is more like Chicago or New York than anything else I had seen in Latin America. Like most foreign visitors I expected Chile to be a hot- tropical country full of steaming jungle and wild savages with blowguns. But I was amazed to discover that Chile hasn't single patch of jungle anywhere in the stretch from Peru in the north to the Antarctic region in the extreme south.

IF CHILE doesn't have jungle, she has just about eve, ything else. From the northern Atacama desert (where rainfall never has been recored- to the glaciers and icebergs that chill the air at the Straits of Magellan, Chile is fantastic showcase for nature's best and worst. It's like some enormous slice of the world. I found the face of the Sahara in the Atacama. I found the face of Japan as stood on the shore of Lake Todos los Santos.

I could have sworn -I was gazing at Mount Fuji as I took in the symmetrical grandeur of the snow-mantled volcano called Mount Osorno. I FOUND THE FACE of Bavaria in the quaint, jovial atmosphere of certain towns in the Valdivia-Puerto Montt region. Heavy German settlement in the area is reflected in the architecture, name signs, language spoken and clothes worn. Blue-eyed blonds named Alfredo Schultz or Herman Gomez are here. I found the face of Alaska at Puerto Williams, below Tierra del Fuego, at the southern tip of South America.

This bleak Chilean naval base has the honor of being the southernmost (and foggiest) town in the world. Not far to the north of Puerto Williams I saw the face of rugged Scottish highlands. English, Scottish and Yugoslavian elements dominate the great sheep empire that covers thousands of acres with the wooliest sheep in the world. The thick, lush forests of the southern lake region of Chile are enough to give anyone claustrophobia. They belong in western Canada, I FOUND THE FACE of Norway's fjords south of Puerto Montt, where the land breaks up into hundreds of tiny ragged islands.

These heavily wooded islands are laced by streams and swollen rivers, a wet, windy wilderness. More than 80 per cent of Chile's population live in the Mediteranean-like heartland in the country's 700 north and south, the section. Running for about Great Central valley is a -fertile plain which has the look and products of southern Franch, Spain and Italy. The Chileno is a big surprise, like his country. You soon realize why he "the Yankee of Latin America." He works hard, but he hard, too.

He has a tremendous sense of humor, give ling and taking jokes with equal vigor and delight. A woman was injured in three-car pileup on Highway 21 near Gorst about 4:45 p. m. yesterday. Mrs.

Ida K. Durham, Port Orchard Rte. 3, Box 527, suffered a knee injury. She was a passenger in an auto driven by her husband, Gerald, 56. The other cars involved were operated by Luella E.

Lieser, 39, 6th and Mayadell S. William, 40, Port Orchard Rte. 3, Box 39-A. British Navy Officer Here On Tour An inspection and familiarization tour of underwater weapons at Keyport naval torpedo station today and shipboard guided missile installations at PSNS tomor-701, row is being made by Comdr. W.

A. Humphrey of the British royal navy. Commander Humphrey, a member of the British naval liaison mission in Washington, D. is accompanied by a representative of the applied physics laboratory of Johns Hopkins university. The British staff ordance officer will look over the guided missile cruiser Columbus, the guided missile frigate USS King and the shipyard's Tartar missile launcher assembly.

He will lunch aboard the King, then tour PSNS electronics and marine machine shops. He is to fly back to Washington tomorrow evening. First English dictionary was compiled by Nathan Bailey in 1721; Samuel Johnson's dictionary appeared in 1775. Patrolmen Don Oswalt and sheriff's deputy Jerry Hall, who investigated, said the William car stopped to make a left turn and the Durham machine struck it from behind, knocking it into the Lieser auto. Planners Eye Federal Funds The Kitsap county joint planning commission last night voted to send planner Ralph Lifvendahl to Olympia to get details on federal money available for long-range planning programs.

The state agency through which the federal funds come is the department of commerce and economic development. Lifvendahl said today the federal legislation involved is act under which federal matching money is available for regional planning purposes. GREETED Sen. Maurine Neuberger (D-Oregon), gets a greeting kiss from Adlai Stevenson at a reception for new members of congress. Stevenson, picked by President-elect Kennedy to be U.

S. ambassador to the United Nations, and the new senator from Oregon were among early arrivals at the reception in Washington. 'Crutches' to Launch March of Dimes Change of colors of the traditional Blue Crutches marks the kickoff Saturday of the 1961 March of Dimes fund campaign. Members of the American Legion posts 68, 149 and 201, along with their auxiliaries, will be in charge of selling the new Rainbow Crutches- plastic pins to help the campaign. As the name indicates, the pins will feature all colors of the rainbow.

Legion members will cover downtown Bremerton, the Callow ave. business district, Manette and outlying shopping areas. The crutches will "sell" for any amount the buyer wants to donate to the cause. Ray M. Spaulding, commander of post 68, is general chairman, assisted by post chairman Donald M.

Ireland, post 68; Roy O'Hara, 149, and Barney Louts, 201. New Strawberry Varieties Available to Growers Here Limited numbers of strawberry plants of the new Columbia and Cascade varieties will be available to commercial growers in Kitsap county this year, county agent Dino R. Sivo announced today, new varieties, developed by Dr. C. W.

Schwartze at the western Washington experiment station, are superior in quality for freezing and commercial preserve ver making," Sivo said. Columbia is resistant to red stele and mildew, two this of the most cade, though susceptible to serious diseases in area. Cas; stele, yields heavily, is superior in texture and flavor and remains relatively firm after freezing and thawing." Distribution of Kitsap county's allocation of plants will be made by a county committee including representatives of the state department of agriculture, processors and growers, Sivo explained. Plants will be released in lots of 3,000. Plantings by commercial growers in Kitsap county this year will determine how well adapted to local conditions the new varieties are, both from the standpoint growers' problems and those the distributor and of processor, he said.

Growers interested in obtaining plants for 1961 may send applications to the county extension office, Port Orchard, for consideration of the committee, Sivo said. Growers approved by the local committee will be expected to pay $30 per 1,000 plants, he added. X-Ray To Detect Bomb In Luggage Developed By PATRICK J. SLOYAN I this is the answer to the bomb WASHINGTON (UPD A unique X-ray machine has been developed that can make a bomb in a suitcase as visible as a goldfish in a bowl. Airliner bombings have killed nearly 200 persons in the past 10.

years, including foreign sabotage cases, and millions of dollars have been lost because of crank phone calls that terrorize airports, pilots and passengers. The Westinghouse X-ray division in Baltimore has looked at the problem this way: A bomb must be smuggled aboard an airplane in a suitcase. How can you check this quickly and thoroughly? Westinghouse engineer Walter Hampte has demonstrated an X- ray machine he thinks can do the job. IN A LABORATORY cubicle, Hampte switched on a screen the size of early television sets. the other side of the screen, separated pry inches suitcase of moved protective by remote control past an X-ray tube.

As the X-Ray beam passed through the suitcase, everything in the ray's path could be seen clearly on the screen. At first, small springs and bits of metal that formed the bag's clasps. New objects came into view as Hampte used the controls to move the bag across the screen. An electric razor -its tiny motor, screws and wiring were crystalized by the fluoroscope rays. Then an oval outline of battered alarm clock, with every movement down to the easy motion of the fly wheel plainly visible.

From the back of the clock, a frayed wire was connected to a battery. Another wire from the battery. was hooked to a bundle looked like several sticks of dynamite. A bomb was revealed. IF THE federal aviation agency and the nation's airlines think PSNS Man Stricken At Work A PSNS boilermaker was in fair condition this afternoon after a heart attack in the shipyard.

Earl H. Soule, 67, 1011 Veneta suffered the attack this morning while at work in the boiler shop. He was taken to U. S. Naval hospital, then transferred to Harrison Memorial hospital.

Hospital attendants said he was resting comfortably. FINAL WEEK YEAR-END STOCK CLEARANCE AT THE SMART SHOP 130 PACIFIC ES 3-9900 problem, Westinghouse will refine and improve it. Its only, practical drawback is that X-rays will fog photographic film. "We'll have a larger screenabout 30 14 inches," said Hampte. "And we'll have a conveyor belt system to move the luggage along quickly." Hampte said an eagle-eyed inspector would be able to check a bag thoroughly in six seconds.

An average load for a jetliner, 150 bags, could be processed in 15 minutes. Each machine would cost about $30,000. It is estimated that one bomb hoax costs an airline $10- 000. AIRPORT police cannot now open a suitcase without a warrant or the owner's permission. Even if they had such authority, the time and money spent rummaging through every passenger's bag would make a customs type inspection impossible.

With the X-ray, a trained inspector could pick out a suspicous object in a suitcase and pull it off conveyor belt for further inspection. would be protected against bombers, Hampte said. "Bomb hoaxes would be a thing of the past. And our machine isn't theory, We know it works." STATEMENT OF CONDITION FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND. LOAN ASSOCIATION OF BREMERTON 327 Pacific Bremerton, Washington ES 7-3797 As of December 31, 1960 ASSETS Cash $1,789,385.62 United States Government Obligations 1,796,825.26 Obligations of U.

S. Government Agencies 399,886.11 3,986,096.99 Federal Home Loan Bank Stock 315,000.00 First Mortgage Loans and Contracts 20,766,921.89 Loans on Savings Accounts 11,106.07 Improvement Loans 39,606.08 Real Estate in Judgment Subject to Redemption 30,580.76 Office Buildings and Equipment 565,829.55 Deferred Charges and Other Assets 137,189.52 $25,852,330.86 LIABILITIES Savings Accounts $23,030,913.16 Loans in Process 539,586.53 Advance Payments and Other. Liabilities 507.411.43 Specific Reserves 102,319.63 General Reserves and Undivided 1,672,100.11 $25,852,330.86.

Kitsap Sun from Bremerton, Washington (2024)
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